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Computer Science

Faculty

Dimitris Samaras img
Dimitris Samaras

Phone: (631) 632-8464

 

INTERESTS

Computer vision; machine learning; computational behavioral sciences; computer graphics; medical imaging; computational photography.

BIOGRAPHY

Dimitris Samaras earned his Ph.D. in Computer Science from University of Pennsylvania in 2001; M.S. in Computer Science from Northeastern University in 1994, and Diploma in Computer Engineering and Informatics from University of Patras, Greece in 1992.

TEACHING SUMMARY

CSE 327/ESE 358 Fundamentals of Computer Vision

CSE 378/525 Introduction to Robotics

CSE 390 Special Topics in Computer Science

CSE 523 Advanced Project in Computer Science I

CSE 524 Advanced Project in Computer Science II

CSE 527  Introduction to Computer Vision

CSE 592 Advanced Topics in Computer Science

ESE 559 EMI in Power Electronics Converters: Generation, Propagation and Mitigation

CSE 615 Advanced Image Analysis

CSE 656 Seminar in Computer Vision

CSE 681 Special Topics in Computer Vision

 

RESEARCH

Dimitris Samaras's research up to now has focused on explaining visual data for Computer Vision, Computer Graphics and Medical Image Analysis, through the appropriate physical and statistical models. A central interest is in modeling the interaction of 3D shape and illumination, (a major source of variability in images) for applications such as shape and motion estimation, object recognition and augmented reality. Further interest in 3D shape deformation is fueled by the availability of image and range data that allows statistical modeling of non-rigid motion. The construction of such statistical models leads to the problem of accurate matching of 3D data. A natural application area for all the above questions is the field of human modeling and especially faces. We have been focusing on topics such as facial appearance under variable illumination and facial expression modeling for biometrics and human computer interaction. My general interest in human modeling has led to exciting collaborations with psychologists who collect visual data about human behavior through multiple modalities such as eye-trackers and fMRI bran imaging. Thus based on recent neuropsychological findings we are exploring the application of machine learning techniques to the analysis of brain images. Current sources of funding include NSF, NIH (NIDA), DoE and DoJ.

AWARDS

Dimitris Samaras is a recipient of the NSF Information Technology Research Award and Certificate of Appreciation (Graduate Admissions) in 2014.