Zuzana Kukelova is an assistant professor at the Czech Technical University in Prague (CTU). She received her PhD from CTU in 2013 and her Master in 2005 from Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia. She was a Post-Doctoral Researcher at Microsoft Research Cambridge (2014-2016). Zuzana is an expert on solving minimal problems in 3D computer vision and methods for generating efficient solvers for systems of polynomial systems [CVPR’12,’16,’17,’18]. She is the co-author of the first automatic generator of efficient polynomial equation solvers based on Gr ̈obner bases [ECCV’08]. She has worked on absolute and relative camera pose estimation for (par- tially) uncalibrated [CVPR’08,ICCV’13, CVPR’15,ICCV’15,’17,CVPR’18,ICCV’19], semi-generalized [ICCV’21, WACV’23] and rolling shutter cameras [CVPR’15,’16,’20, ECCV’20, ACCV’18, TPAMI’20], as well as solvers based on SIFT correspondences [ICCV’19,ACCV’20,ECCV’22]. Zuzana has co-organized tutorials on minimal problems at ICCV’15 and CVPR’19, was / is an AC for 3DV’18, 3DV’19, ACCV’20, ACCV’22, CVPR’22, and CVPR’23, a program chair for 3DV’20, a general chair for 3DV’22, and will be a program chair for ECCV’26.
Gabrielle Flood recently started as a postdoctoral researcher at the Visual Recognition Group at Czech Technical University in Prague, under the supervision on Zuzana Kukelova. Prior to this, she did a postdoc at Lund University, where she also defended her Ph.D. in applied mathematics and computer vision in 2021, supervised by Kalle Åström. She received a M.Sc. in applied mathematics in 2016, also from the Faculty of Engineering at Lund University. Gabrielles research interests concern image analysis in general and geometric problems in computer vision in particular. Her research has been focusing on medical image analysis and on positioning and robust estimation of 3D reconstructions from different sensor modalities - such as images and audio - and efficient merging of such reconstructions.
Viktor Larsson is an assistant professor at Lund University in Sweden. He received his PhD in mathematics from Lund University in 2018. From 2018 to 2022 he worked as a post-doc and senior researcher at ETH Zurich. He has done extensive work in robust camera calibration [CVPR’18, ICCV’19, CVPR’20, ECCV’20, CVPR’21, CVPR’22] and camera pose estimation (both absolute [CVPR’18, ICCV’19, PAMI’19, ICCV’21, CVPR’22], relative [CVPR’16, ICCV’19, CVPR’20, CVPR’21] and hybrid [WACV’23]). He has also developed methods for constructing minimal solvers [ECCV’16, CVPR’17, ICCV’17, CVPR’18]. He was awarded the Best Paper Award at ACCV’18, Best Student Paper Award at ICCV’21 and Best Paper Honorable Mention at 3DV'24. Viktor has previously co-organized tutorials at CVPR’19, ECCV’22, ICCV'23 and 3DV'24. He has served as area chair for 3DV, CVPR and ECCV, and will be local chair for ECCV’26.
Torsten Sattler is a Senior Researcher at CTU. Before, he was a tenured associate professor at Chalmers Uni- versity of Technology. He received a PhD in Computer Science from RWTH Aachen University, Germany, in 2014. From Dec. 2013 to Dec. 2018, he was a post-doctoral and senior researcher at ETH Zurich. Torsten has worked on feature-based localization methods [PAMI’17], long-term localization [CVPR’18,ICCV’19, ECCV’20,CVPR’21] (see also the benchmarks at visuallocalization.net), localization on mobile devices [ECCV’14, IJRR’20], and using semantic scene understanding for localization [CVPR’18, ECCV’18,ICCV’19]. Torsten has co-organized tutorials and workshops at CVPR (’14,’15,’17-’20), ECCV (’18,’20), and ICCV (’17,’19), and was / is an area chair for CVPR (’18,’22,’23), ICCV (’21, ’23), 3DV (’18-’21), GCPR (’19,’21), ICRA (’19,’20), and ECCV (’20). He was a program chair for DAGM GCPR’20, a general chair for 3DV’22, and a program chair for ECCV’24.
Akihiro Sugimoto received his PhD in mathematical engineering from the University of Tokyo in 1996. After working at Hitachi Advanced Research Laboratory, Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International (ATR), and Kyoto University, he joined the National Institute of Informatics (NII) in 2002, where he is a full Professor and also a Vice Director-General. From 2006 to 2007, he was a visiting Professor at the University of Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallee, France. He served as an AE of IJCV, and is an AE of CVIU and TPAMI. He also serves as area chair in several top conferences including ICCV'19, '21, '23 and '25 (Lead AC); CVPR'24, '25 (Lead AC); ECCV'20, '22, and '24 (Lead AC). He also served an area chair for AC for BMVC '23, '24, and '25; WACV'22; ICLR'24, and '25; NeurIPS'24, and '25. He was a PC of ACCV 2010, a GC of ACCV'12 and '20; and the GC of 3DV'20. He also serves for the digital geometry community such as DGCI and DGMM.