Dr. Bernice E. Rogowitz
Founder & Principal Scientist
SPIE Involvement:
Editor | Author | Instructor
Publications (24)

Proceedings Article | 17 March 2015 Paper
Proceedings Volume 9394, 939413 (2015) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2085802
KEYWORDS: Video surveillance, Visualization, Video, Detection and tracking algorithms, Surveillance, Surveillance systems, Computer simulations, Target detection, Environmental monitoring, Video processing

Proceedings Article | 14 March 2013 Paper
Proceedings Volume 8651, 86510B (2013) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2013502
KEYWORDS: Visualization, Electronic imaging, Sensors, Fractal analysis, Visual analytics, Image quality, Clouds, Photography, Image processing, Data modeling

Proceedings Article | 9 March 2012 Paper
Bernice Rogowitz, Alyssa Goodman
Proceedings Volume 8291, 82910W (2012) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.915887
KEYWORDS: Visualization, Visual analytics, Imaging systems, Detection and tracking algorithms, Pattern recognition, Evolutionary algorithms, Data modeling, Image processing, Image quality, Databases

Proceedings Article | 5 March 2011 Paper
Bernice Rogowitz, Naim Matasci
Proceedings Volume 7865, 78650I (2011) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.881734
KEYWORDS: Visualization, Visual analytics, 3D modeling, Associative arrays, Human-machine interfaces, Biological research, Software development, Telecommunications, Web services, Geography

Proceedings Article | 10 February 2009 Paper
Proceedings Volume 7240, 724007 (2009) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.817154
KEYWORDS: Video, Image segmentation, Internet, Data hiding, Databases, Diamond, Web services, Photography, Composites, Computing systems

Showing 5 of 24 publications
Proceedings Volume Editor (28)

SPIE Conference Volume | 10 April 2015

SPIE Conference Volume | 18 March 2014

SPIE Conference Volume | 26 March 2013

SPIE Conference Volume | 9 March 2012

SPIE Conference Volume | 1 February 2011

Showing 5 of 28 publications
Conference Committee Involvement (29)
Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XX
9 February 2015 | San Francisco, California, United States
Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XIX
3 February 2014 | San Francisco, California, United States
Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XVIII
4 February 2013 | Burlingame, California, United States
Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XVII
23 January 2012 | Burlingame, California, United States
Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XVI
24 January 2011 | San Francisco Airport, California, United States
Showing 5 of 29 Conference Committees
Course Instructor
SC969: Perception, Cognition, and Next Generation Imaging
The world of electronic imaging is an explosion of hardware and software technologies, used in a variety of applications, in a wide range of domains. These technologies provide visual, auditory and tactile information to human observers, whose job it is to make decisions and solve problems. In this course, we will study fundamentals in human perception and cognition, and see how these principles can guide the design of systems that enhance human performance. We will study examples in display technology, image quality, visualization, image search, visual monitoring and haptics, and students will be encouraged to bring forward ongoing problems of interest to them.
SC1050: Perception and Cognition for Emerging Imaging Technologies
Imaging, visualization and computer graphics provide visual representations of data in order to communicate, provide insight and enhance problem solving. The human observer actively processes these visual representations using perceptual and cognitive mechanisms that have evolved over millions of years. The goal of this tutorial is to provide an introduction to these processing mechanisms, and to show how this knowledge can guide the decisions we make about how to represent data visually, how we visually represent patterns and relationships in data, and how we can use human pattern recognition to extract features in the data. The course is organized into four sections: Light, the Eye, and the Brain: Visual stimulus, visual physiology, eye movements, and neural pathways. Visual Information Processing: Luminance, contrast, spatial resolution, and spatial frequency; temporal frequency and motion; color vision; and luminance vs. color resolution. Visual Cognition - Attention and Perceptual Organization: Color as a "pre-attentive" cue, eye movements and visual attention, finding patterns and features, and representing relationships. Applying Perceptual Knowledge to Imaging, Visualization and Computer Graphics: Visual data representation, color maps, semantics, finding features and relationships in data, and a framework for addressing visualization and visual analysis perceptually.
SIGN IN TO:
  • View contact details

UPDATE YOUR PROFILE
Is this your profile? Update it now.
Don’t have a profile and want one?

Advertisement
Advertisement
Back to Top