The following presentations were given at the 2006 Scene Understanding Symposium. All lecture notes are courtesy of the person named and used with permission.
Course notes.TIME | TOPICS |
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8:55 | Opening Remarks |
9:00-9:20 | From Zero to Gist in 200 msec: The Time Course of Scene Recognition (PDF - 1.3 MB) (Courtesy of Aude Oliva and Michelle Greene.) |
9:20-9:45 | Feedforward Theories of Visual Cortex Predict Human Performance in Rapid Image Categorization (PDF - 4.4 MB) (Courtesy of Thomas Serre and Tomaso Poggio.) |
9:45-10:05 | Latency, Duration and Codes for Objects in Inferior Temporal Cortex (PDF - 1.9 MB) (Courtesy of Gabriel Kreiman, Chou Hung, Tomaso Poggio and James DiCarlo.) |
10:25-10:50 | From Feedforward Vision to Natural Vision: The Impact of Free Viewing, Task, and Clutter on Monkey Inferior Temporal Object Representations (PDF - 1.6 MB) (Courtesy of James DiCarlo.) |
10:50-11:10 | Invariant Visual Representations of Natural Images by Single Neurons in the Human Brain |
11:10-11:40 | Perception of Objects in Natural Scenes and the Role of Attention (PDF) (Courtesy of Karla Evans and Anne Treisman.) |
1:00-1:25 | Natural Scene Categorization: From Humans to Computers (PDF - 5.3 MB) (Courtesy of Li Fei-Fei, Rufin VanRullen, Asha Iyer, Christof Koch and Pietro Perona.) |
1:25-1:50 | Contextual Associations in the Brain |
1:50-2:15 | Using the Forest to See the Trees: A Computational Model Relating Features, Objects and Scenes (PDF - 1.2 MB) (Courtesy of Antonio Torralba, Kevin Murphy, and William T. Freeman.) |
2:25-2:45 | Detecting and Remembering Pictures With and Without Visual Noise |
2:45-3:05 | Scene Perception after Those First Few Hundred Milliseconds (PDF) (Courtesy of Jeremy M. Wolfe.) |
3:05-3:35 | The Artist as Neuroscientist |
4:00-5:00 | Brain and Cognitive Sciences Colloquium - Scene Processing with a Wave of Spikes: Reverse Engineering the Visual System |