Brief Abstract
Computer vision, machine learning & deep networks, mathematical image analysis (segmentation, motion estimation, multiview reconstruction, visual SLAM), shape analysis, autonomous systems & self-driving cars, variational methods and partial differential equations, convex and combinatorial optimization & statistical inference.
- Date: 01.12.2023
- Location: Online Webinar
- Speaker: Daniel Cremers, TU Munich
Presenter Bio
Daniel Cremers received Bachelor degrees in Mathematics (1994) and Physics (1994), and a Master’s degree in Theoretical Physics (1997) from the University of Heidelberg. In 2002 he obtained a PhD in Computer Science from the University of Mannheim, Germany. Subsequently he spent two years as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) and one year as a permanent researcher at Siemens Corporate Research in Princeton, NJ. From 2005 until 2009 he was associate professor at the University of Bonn, Germany. Since 2009 he holds the Chair of Computer Vision and Artificial Intelligence at the Technical University of Munich. His publications received several awards, including the ‘Best Paper of the Year 2003’ (Int. Pattern Recognition Society), the ‘Olympus Award 2004’ (now called ‘German Pattern Recognition Award’) and the ‘2005 UCLA Chancellor’s Award for Postdoctoral Research’. For pioneering research he received a Starting Grant (2009), two Proof of Concept Grants (2014 & 2018), a Consolidator Grant (2015) and an Advanced Grant (2020) by the European Research Council. Professor Cremers has served as associate editor for several journals including the International Journal of Computer Vision, the IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence and the SIAM Journal of Imaging Sciences. He has served as area chair (associate editor) for ICCV, ECCV, CVPR, ACCV, IROS, etc, and as program chair for ACCV 2014. In 2018 he organized the largest ever European Conference on Computer Vision in Munich with 3300 delegates. He is member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities. He served as honorary member of the Dagstuhl Scientific Directorate. In December 2010 he was listed among “Germany’s top 40 researchers below 40” (Capital). On March 1st 2016, Prof. Cremers received the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Award, the biggest award in German academia. The year 2022/23 he spent on sabbatical at Oxford University hosted by the Deparment of Engineering and as a visiting fellow of Exeter College. According to Google Scholar, Prof. Cremers has an h-index of 118 and his papers have been cited 69387 times. According to Guide2Research he is among the most influential computer scientists in Germany. In 2022 and 2023, he was listed among the top 10 most influential scholars in robotics of the last decade. He serves as co-founder, advisor and business angel to several startups.