Omnidirectional Computer Vision

4th Workshop

in conjunction with IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR'2023)

Monday June 19th, 2023 - 1:00pm to 6:00pm, Room: East 2


Proceedings available here

Zoom access to workshop here (CVPR registration required)





Previous editions of the workshop: 2020, 2021, 2022

Introduction

Our objective is to provide a venue for novel research in omnidirectional computer vision with an eye toward actualizing these ideas for commercial or societal benefit. As omnidirectional cameras become more widespread, we want to bridge the gap between the research and application of omnidirectional vision technologies. Omnidirectional cameras are already widespread in a number of application areas such as automotive, surveillance, photography, simulation and other use-cases that benefit from large field of view. More recently, they have garnered interest for use in virtual and augmented reality. We want to encourage the development of new models that natively operate on omnidirectional imagery as well as close the performance gap between perspective-image and omnidirectional algorithms.

OmniCV 2022 @ CVPR, New Orleans 

Sponsors

Motivation

From immersive experiences to autonomous driving to medical imaging and more, we are increasingly seeing that maximizing a camera’s field of view can solve real-world problems. In the past few years, omnidirectional imaging has grown in interest, driven in part by the desire to maximize the amount of content and context encapsulated by a single image. Fisheye cameras installed in modern vehicles and commodity omnidirectional cameras from companies like Ricoh and Insta360 have helped to increase the popularity of this imaging modality and have opened the door for more consumer-facing applications in the automotive, home services and real estate industries, among others. Our workshop seeks to provide a link between the formative research that supports these advances and the realization of commercial products that leverage this technology. We want to encourage the development of new algorithms and applications for this imaging modality that will continue to drive this engine of progress.

Ethical Considerations

Wide field of view and omnidirectional imaging require special privacy considerations as these techniques capture more expansive content than the more common perspective image. Furthermore, the common application of wide field of view imaging to surveillance and its frequent use as an "always-on" sensor for vehicles and augmented reality devices raise questions about how we can leverage the power of this imaging modality while also preserving individual privacy. 

We have encouraged our speakers to address these considerations in their keynotes. We also encourage authors to explore topics around the privacy implications of omnidirectional imaging, along with privacy-preserving solutions that are unique to this modality and its applications. We further encourage authors to consider ways to leverage omnidirectional vision to address societal and environmental problems, as well as other important issues, that impact billions of people around the world.

Keynote Speakers

Academia

Industry

Wolfgang Förstner
(University of Bonn) 

Adrian Hilton
(University of Surrey) 

Jongwoo Lim
(Hanyang University / MultiplEYE) 

Jacob Roll
(Qualcomm Sweden)

Robin Jenkin
(NVIDIA)

Points of Contact

Kaavya Rekanar (kaavya.rekanar@ul.ie)

Ciarán Eising
(ciaran.eising@ul.ie)

Marc Eder
(marc.eder@yembo.ai)

Stefan Milz  
(stefan.milz@spleenlab.ai)