| Introducing Cornelia Fermüller: The Science of Seeing |
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bridges vol. 13, April 2007 / News from the Network: Austrian Researchers Abroad by Roland Schneider mp3 download Robots nowadays can do a lot of things that normally only humans can do. They mow the lawn, build cars, and some of them can walk like we do, or even play soccer (maybe even better than we do ...). Over the past 50 years, robots were "taught" by their human inventors to imitate their creators' abilities. Still, they lack one of our most important abilities through which we recognize and interact with our surroundings - Vision. "More than 50 percent of the human brain is dedicated to vision, that gives a pretty clear indication of its complexity," Prof. Cornelia Fermueller explains while sitting in her office at the University of Maryland in College Park (UMD).
Cornelia Fermüller
Discovering the secrets of vision One might frivolously assume that vision is a rather simple task. After all, humans do it every day so effortlessly, and even camera-equipped cell phones are able to take pictures of objects. A very popular fallacy - the exact opposite is the case: While it is indeed fairly simple to record images of our surroundings, it is very hard to understand those images and react accordingly. Fermueller explains in basic terms what her field of visual navigation in computer vision and robotics is all about: "Imagine a robot that wanders through the world and as humans have eyes the robot has cameras. Just as a human, or animal, acquires images with his eyes, and the brain processes these images to arrive at an interpretation of the visual world, the cameras on the robot acquire images, which a computer processes. And my task now is to investigate and to understand what these computations are."
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