"It ranges from a novel attempt to put deep learning within the framework of compressed sensing and sparse models, reconstruction of low rank matrices, shifting into learning geometry, shape representation that has the potential to migrate geometry analysis into that of deep learning, and pure geometric problems dealt in a novel, yet axiomatic, manner." --zbMATH
Section One 1. Compressed Learning for Image Classification: A Deep Neural Network Approach E. Zisselman, A. Adler and M. Elad
Section Two 2. Exploiting the Structure Effectively and Efficiently in Low Rank Matrix Recovery Jian-Feng Cai and Ke Wei
Section Three 3. Partial Single- and Multi-Shape Dense Correspondence Using Functional Maps Alex Bronstein 4. Shape Correspondence and Functional Maps Maks Ovsjanikov 5. Factoring Scene Layout From Monocular Images in Presence of Occlusion Niloy J. Mitra
Ron Kimmel is a Professor of Computer Science at the Technion where he holds the Montreal Chair in Sciences. He held a post-doctoral position at UC Berkeley and a visiting professorship at Stanford University. He has worked in various areas of image and shape analysis in computer vision, image processing, and computer graphics. Kimmel's interest in recent years has been non-rigid shape processing and analysis, medical imaging and computational biometry, numerical optimization of problems with a geometric flavor, and applications of metric geometry, deep learning, and differential geometry. Kimmel is an IEEE Fellow for his contributions to image processing and non-rigid shape analysis. He is an author of two books, an editor of one, and an author of numerous articles. He is the founder of the Geometric Image Processing Lab. and a founder and advisor of several successful image processing and analysis companies.
Professor Tai Xue-Cheng is a member of the Department of Mathematics at the Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong and also the University of Bergen of Norway. His research interests include Numerical partial differential equations, optimization techniques, inverse problems, and image processing. He is the winner for several prizes for his contributions to scientific computing and innovative researches for image processing. He served as organizing and program committee members for many international conferences and has been often invited for international conferences. He has served as referee and reviewers for many premier conferences and journals.