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Wed 04/24
Angjoo Kanazawa headshot

Seminar @ Cornell Tech: Angjoo Kanazawa

Perceiving Humans in the 3D World

Since the dawn of civilization, we have functioned in a social environment where we spend our days interacting with other humans. As we approach a society where intelligent systems and humans coexist, these systems must also interpret and interact with humans that reside in the 3D world. While computer vision systems today work well for finding 2D patterns in images or reconstructing rigid objects in 3D, they still struggle to perceive non-rigid objects in 3D, like moving human bodies. My goal is to build a system that can perceive and understand embodied agents in the 3D world from visual input. Such systems can enable motion capture in-the-wild, robots that learn to act by visually observing people, and ultimately, socially intelligent machines that understand human behavior.

In this talk, I will discuss my work in reconstructing 3D non-rigid, deformable objects such as humans and animals from everyday photographs and video, and show how such systems can be used to train a simulated character to learn to act by watching YouTube videos. I will discuss the challenges related to the limited availability and quality of ground-truth 3D data and how we can overcome these challenges using weakly supervised approaches.

Speaker Bio

Angjoo Kanazawa is a BAIR postdoctoral researcher at UC Berkeley advised by Jitendra Malik, Alyosha Efros, and Trevor Darrell. Her research is at the intersection of computer vision graphics and machine learning, focusing on 3D reconstruction of deformable objects such as humans and animals from everyday photographs and video.  She received her PhD in Computer Science from the University of Maryland, College Park where she was advised by David Jacobs and her Bachelor’s in Computer Science and Math from New York University, working with Rob Fergus. She has also spent time at the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems with Michael Black, as well as NEC Labs America and Google’s self-driving car team. Her work has received the best paper award at Eurographics 2016 and she is the recipient of the Google Anita Borg Memorial Scholarship.