Best Paper Awards
The best paper award at Procams 2005 was sponsored by Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs. The award was shared between these two papers:
- Pixel-aligned warping for multi-projector tiled display by Mark Hereld and Rick L. Stevens.
- A Theory for Photometric Self-Calibration of Multiple Overlapping Projectors and Cameras Peng Song and Tat-Jen Cham
Papers
Paper Session 1: Interactive Projector-Camera Systems
Steerable Projector Calibration
Mark Ashdown and Yoichi Sato
University of Tokyo, Japan
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Improving the Speed of Virtual Rear Projection: A GPU-Centric Architecture
Matthew Flagg, Jay Summet, and James M. Rehg
Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
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A Camera-Projector System for Real-Time 3D Video
Marcelo Bernardes Vieira, Luiz Velho, Asla Sá, and Paulo Cezar Carvalho
IMPA - Instituto de Matemática Pura e Aplicada, Brazil
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Paper Session 2: Calibrating Displays
A Theory for Photometric Self-Calibration of Multiple Overlapping Projectors and Cameras
Peng Song and Tat-Jen Cham
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, and Singapore-MIT Alliance
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Pixel-aligned warping for multi-projector tiled display
Mark Hereld and Rick L. Stevens
Argonne National Laboratory, and University of Chicago, USA
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Radiometric Compensation in a Projector-Camera System Based on the Properties of Human Vision System
Dong Wang, Imari Sato, Takahiro Okabe, and Yoichi Sato
University of Tokyo, Japan
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Sensing Deforming and Moving Objects with Commercial Off the Shelf Hardware
Philip Fong and Florian Buron
Stanford University, USA
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Active Pursuit Tracking in a Projector-Camera System with Application to Augmented Reality
Shilpi Gupta and Christopher Jaynes
University of Kentucky, USA
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Dense 3D Reconstruction with an Uncalibrated Stereo System using Coded Structured Light
Ryo Furukawa and Hiroshi Kawasaki
Hiroshima City University and Tokyo University, Japan
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Handheld Projectors for Mixing Physical and Digital Textures
Paul Beardsley Clifton Forlines Ramesh Raskar Jeroen VanBaar
Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs, USA
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Automatic Projector Calibration Using Self-Identifying Patterns
Mark Fiala
National Research Council of Canada, Canada
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Annotating Real World objects using a Steerable Projector-Camera Unit
Andreas Butz and Christian Schmitz
University of Munich and Saarland University, Germany
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Multi-Planar Projection by Fixed-Center Pan-Tilt Projectors
Ikuhisa Mitsugami, Norimichi Ukita, Masatsugu Kidode
Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Japan
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Structured Light Based Depth Edge Detection for Object Shape Recovery
Cheolhwon Kim, Jiyoung Park, Juneho Yi, and Matthew Turk
Sungkyunkwan University, Korea, and University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
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Camera Based Automatic Calibration for the Varrier System
Jinghua Ge, Dan Sandin, Tom Peterka, Todd Margolis, Tom DeFanti
University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
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Paper Session 3: Projector-Camera Systems Application
Capturing 2½D Depth and Texture of Time-Varying Scenes Using Structured Infrared Light
Christian Frueh and Avideh Zakhor
University of California, Berkeley, USA
Smart Light Ultra High Speed Projector for Spatial Multiplexing Optical Transmission
Hideaki Nii, Maki Sugimoto, and Masahiko Inami
University of Electro-Communications and Japan Science and Technology Agency, Japan
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HI-Space: A projector-camera interaction system
Richard May and Bob Baddeley
Pacific Northwest National Lab, USA
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Improved Topologial Fiducial Tracking in the reacTIVision System
Ross Bencina, Martin Kaltenbrunner and Sergi Jordà
Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain
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