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        13 - 17  January, 2019 • Burlingame, California USA

Monday January 14, 2019

Measurement and Evaluation of Appearance I

Session Chairs: Mathieu Hebert, Université Jean Monnet de Saint Etienne (France) and Takuroh Sone, Ricoh Company, Ltd. (Japan)
9:00 – 9:30 AM
Cypress A

MAAP-481
Refractive index of inks and colored gloss (Invited), Lionel Simonot1, Oussama Sari2, and Mathieu Hebert2; 1Université de Poitiers and 2Université Jean Monnet de Saint Etienne (France)



Measurement and Evaluation of Appearance II

Session Chair: Takuroh Sone, Ricoh Company, Ltd. (Japan)
9:30 – 10:10 AM
Cypress A

9:30MAAP-476
Evaluation of sparkle impression considering observation distance, Shuhei Watanabe and Takuroh Sone, Ricoh Company, Ltd. (Japan)

9:50MAAP-477
Comparative analysis of transmittance measurement geometries and apparatus, Marjan Shahpaski1, Luis Sapaico2, and Sabine Süsstrunk1; 1École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) (Switzerland) and 2Océ Print Logic Technologies S.A. (France)



10:10 – 10:50 AM Coffee Break

Appearance Design and 3D Printing I

Session Chair: Jon Yngve Hardeberg, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) (Norway)
10:50 – 11:30 AM
Cypress A

MAAP-478
KEYNOTE: Beyond printing: How to expand 3D applications through postprocessing, Isabel Sanz, HP Inc. (Spain)

Isabel Sanz received an MSc in mechanical engineering from the Technical University of Valencia (Spain) and from RWTH Aachen (Germany). Her current position is 3D Printing Advanced Technical Consultant at HP Inc. She complemented her studies with a master in project management from La Salle, in Barcelona (Spain). Her career at HP started as R&D Mechanical Engineer in the HP Large Format Printing business. After that experience, she moved into the 3D Printing business. There, Isabel started the benchmark printing process for Multi Jet Fusion customers. Nowadays, she is technically developing new applications and helping customers to introduce and grow the 3D printing opportunities in their products and processes. She holds 9 patents and 1 publication and she keeps looking for new and innovative ways of doing things, evangelizing the movement to additive manufacturing.




Appearance Design and 3D Printing II

Session Chair: Jon Yngve Hardeberg, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) (Norway)
11:30 AM – 12:10 PM
Cypress A

11:30MAAP-479
A soft-proofing workflow for color 3D printing - Addressing needs for the future, Ingeborg Tastl1, Miguel A. Lopez-Alvarez2, Alexandra Ju2, Morgan Schramm2, Jordi Roca2, and Matthew Shepherd2; 1HP Labs, HP Inc. and 2HP Inc. (United States)

11:50MAAP-480
Improving aesthetics through post-processing for 3D printed parts, Alexandra Ju, Andrew Fitzhugh, Jiwon Jun, and Mary Baker, HP Inc. (United States)



Discussion: Rarely Asked Questions on Material Appearance

Moderators: Mathieu Hebert, Université Jean Monnet de Saint Etienne (France); Lionel Simonot, Université de Poitiers (France); and Ingeborg Tastl, HP Labs, HP Inc. (United States)
12:10 – 12:30 PM
Cypress A

Can perception models for gloss and color be combined to assess the appearance of metallic objects or lusterware? Can translucency be assessed by simple optical measurement? Do commercially available color measurement devices determine the dgree of light scattering that occurs in translucent materials and do the numbers correspond with the visible perception? Appearance is an area where questions are much more numerous than answers and where questions expressed today can become guidelines for scientific research in the future. Everyone is welcome to share their own questions arising from their own professional experience. This is meant to be a truly interactive session.



12:30 – 2:00 PM Lunch

Monday Plenary

2:00 – 3:00 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

Autonomous Driving Technology and the OrCam MyEye, Amnon Shashua, President & CEO, Mobileye, an Intel Company, and Senior Vice President of Intel Corporation (United States)

The field of transportation is undergoing a seismic change with the coming introduction of autonomous driving. The technologies required to enable computer driven cars involves the latest cutting edge artificial intelligence algorithms along three major thrusts: Sensing, Planning and Mapping. Prof. Shashua will describe the challenges and the kind of computer vision and machine learning algorithms involved, but will do that through the perspective of Mobileye's activity in this domain. He will then describe how OrCam leverages computer vision, situation awareness and language processing to enable Blind and Visually impaired to interact with the world through a miniature wearable device.

Prof. Amnon Shashua holds the Sachs chair in computer science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His field of expertise is computer vision and machine learning. For his academic achievements he received the MARR prize Honorable Mention in 2001, the Kaye innovation award in 2004, and the Landau award in exact sciences in 2005.

In 1999 Prof. Shashua co-founded Mobileye, an Israeli company developing a system-on-chip and computer vision algorithms for a driving assistance system, providing a full range of active safety features using a single camera. Today, approximately 24 million cars rely on Mobileye technology to make their vehicles safer to drive. In August 2014, Mobileye claimed the title for largest Israeli IPO ever, by raising $1B at a market cap of $5.3B. In addition, Mobileye is developing autonomous driving technology with more than a dozen car manufacturers. The introduction of autonomous driving capabilities is of a transformative nature and has the potential of changing the way cars are built, driven and own in the future. In August 2017, Mobileye became an Intel company in the largest Israeli acquisition deal ever of $15.3B. Today, Prof. Shashua is the President and CEO of Mobileye and a Senior Vice President of Intel Corporation leading Intel's Autonomous Driving Group.

In 2010 Prof. Shashua co-founded OrCam which harnesses computer vision and artificial intelligence to assist people who are visually impaired or blind. The OrCam MyEye device is unique in its ability to provide visual aid to hundreds of millions of people, through a discreet wearable platform. Within its wide-ranging scope of capabilities, OrCam's device can read most texts (both indoors and outdoors) and learn to recognize thousands of new items and faces.


3:00 – 3:30 PM Coffee Break

Color Rendering of Materials I

Session Chair: Lionel Simonot, Université de Poitiers (France)
3:30 – 4:10 PM
Cypress A

This session is jointly sponsored by: Color Imaging XXIV: Displaying, Processing, Hardcopy, and Applications, and Material Appearance 2019.


MAAP-075
KEYNOTE: Capturing appearance in text: The Material Definition Language (MDL), Andy Kopra, NVIDIA Advanced Rendering Center (Germany)

Andy Kopra is a technical writer at the NVIDIA Advanced Rendering Center in Berlin, Germany. With more than 35 years of professional computer graphics experience, he writes and edits documentation for NVIDIA customers on a wide variety of topics. He also designs, programs, and maintains the software systems used in the production of the documentation websites and printed materials.




Color Rendering of Materials II

Session Chair: Lionel Simonot, Université de Poitiers (France)
4:10 – 4:50 PM
Cypress A

This session is jointly sponsored by: Color Imaging XXIV: Displaying, Processing, Hardcopy, and Applications, and Material Appearance 2019.


4:10COLOR-076
Real-time accurate rendering of color and texture of car coatings, Eric Kirchner1, Ivo Lans1, Pim Koeckhoven1, Khalil Huraibat2, Francisco Martinez-Verdu2, Esther Perales2, Alejandro Ferrero3, and Joaquin Campos3; 1AkzoNobel (the Netherlands), 2University of Alicante (Spain), and 3CSIC (Spain)

4:30COLOR-077
Recreating Van Gogh's original colors on museum displays, Eric Kirchner1, Muriel Geldof2, Ella Hendriks3, Art Ness Proano Gaibor2, Koen Janssens4, John Delaney5, Ivo Lans1, Frank Ligterink2, Luc Megens2, Teio Meedendorp6, and Kathrin Pilz6; 1AkzoNobel (the Netherlands), 2RCE (the Netherlands), 3University of Amsterdam (the Netherlands), 4University of Antwerp (Belgium), 5National Gallery (United States), and 6Van Gogh Museum (the Netherlands)



5:00 – 6:00 PM All-Conference Welcome Reception

Tuesday January 15, 2019

7:30 – 8:45 AM Women in Electronic Imaging Breakfast

Material Appearance Perception

Session Chairs: Mark McCourt, North Dakota State University (United States) and Ingeborg Tastl, HP Labs, HP Inc. (United States)
9:10 – 10:10 AM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

This session is jointly sponsored by: Human Vision and Electronic Imaging 2019, and Material Appearance 2019.


9:10MAAP-202
Material appearance: Ordering and clustering, Davit Gigilashvili, Jean-Baptiste Thomas, Marius Pedersen, and Jon Yngve Hardeberg, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) (Norway)

9:30MAAP-203
A novel translucency classification for computer graphics, Morgane Gerardin1, Lionel Simonot2, Jean-Philippe Farrugia3, Jean-Claude Iehl3, Thierry Fournel4, and Mathieu Hebert4; 1Institut d'Optique Graduate School, 2Université de Poitiers, 3LIRIS, and 4Université Jean Monnet de Saint Etienne (France)

9:50MAAP-204
Constructing glossiness perception model of computer graphics with sounds, Takumi Nakamura, Keita Hirai, and Takahiko Horiuchi, Chiba University (Japan)



10:00 AM – 7:30 PM Industry Exhibition

10:10 – 10:50 AM Coffee Break

Appearance Design and Computation

Session Chair: Mathieu Hebert, Université Jean Monnet de Saint Etienne (France)
10:50 AM – 12:30 PM
Cypress A

10:50MAAP-482
Image-based BRDF design, Ezra Davis1, Weiqi Shi1, Hongzhi Wu2, Julie Dorsey1, and Holly Rushmeier1; 1Yale University (United States) and 2Zhejiang University (China)

11:10MAAP-483
Hair tone estimation at roots via imaging device with embedded deep learning, Panagiotis-Alexandros Bokaris, Emmanuel Malherbe, Thierry Wasserman, Michaël Haddad, and Matthieu Perrot, L'Oreal Research & Innovation (France)

11:30MAAP-484
CNN based parameter optimization for texture synthesis, Jiangpeng He1, Kyle Ziga1, Judy Bagchi2, and Fengqing Zhu1; 1Purdue University and 2Dzine Steps (United States)

11:50MAAP-485
Appearance reconstruction of mutual illumination effect between plane and curved fluorescent objects, Shoji Tominaga1,2, Keita Hirai3, and Takahiko Horiuchi3; 1Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) (Norway), 2Nagano University (Japan), and 3Chiba University (Japan)

12:10MAAP-486
Accurate physico-realistic ray tracing simulation of displays, Pierre Boher1, Thierry Leroux1, Thomas Muller2, and Philippe Porral2; 1ELDIM and 2United Visual Researchers (France)



12:30 – 2:00 PM Lunch

Tuesday Plenary

2:00 – 3:00 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

The Quest for Vision Comfort: Head-Mounted Light Field Displays for Virtual and Augmented Reality, Hong Hua, Professor of Optical Sciences, University of Arizona (United States)

Hong Hua will discuss the high promises and the tremendous progress made recently toward the development of head-mounted displays (HMD) for both virtual and augmented reality displays, developing HMDs that offer uncompromised optical pathways to both digital and physical worlds without encumbrance and discomfort confronts many grand challenges, both from technological perspectives and human factors. She will particularly focus on the recent progress, challenges and opportunities for developing head-mounted light field displays (LF-HMD), which are capable of rendering true 3D synthetic scenes with proper focus cues to stimulate natural eye accommodation responses and address the well-known vergence-accommodation conflict in conventional stereoscopic displays.

Dr. Hong Hua is a Professor of Optical Sciences at the University of Arizona. With over 25 years of experience, Dr. Hua is widely recognized through academia and industry as an expert in wearable display technologies and optical imaging and engineering in general. Dr. Hua’s current research focuses on optical technologies enabling advanced 3D displays, especially head-mounted display technologies for virtual reality and augmented reality applications, and microscopic and endoscopic imaging systems for medicine. Dr. Hua has published over 200 technical papers and filed a total of 23 patent applications in her specialty fields, and delivered numerous keynote addresses and invited talks at major conferences and events worldwide. She is an SPIE Fellow and OSA senior member. She was a recipient of NSF Career Award in 2006 and honored as UA Researchers @ Lead Edge in 2010. Dr. Hua and her students shared a total of 8 “Best Paper” awards in various IEEE, SPIE and SID conferences. Dr. Hua received her Ph.D. degree in Optical Engineering from the Beijing Institute of Technology in China in 1999. Prior to joining the UA faculty in 2003, Dr. Hua was an Assistant Professor with the University of Hawaii at Manoa in 2003, was a Beckman Research Fellow at the Beckman Institute of University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign between 1999 and 2002, and was a post-doc at the University of Central Florida in 1999.


3:00 – 3:30 PM Coffee Break

Describing Material Appearance

Session Chair: Lionel Simonot, Université de Poitiers (France)
3:30 – 4:00 PM
Cypress A

MAAP-487
Enough (data) already!, Marc Ellens, X-Rite, Inc. (United States)



Measurement and Evaluation of Appearance III

Moderators: Mathieu Hebert, Université Jean Monnet de Saint Etienne (France); Lionel Simonot, Université de Poitiers (France); and Ingeborg Tastl, HP Labs, HP Inc. (United States)
4:00 – 4:20 PM
Cypress A

MAAP-475
KEYNOTE: On the acquisition and reproduction of material appearance, Jon Yngve Hardeberg, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) (Norway)

Jon Yngve Hardeberg (1971) is a professor in the department of computer science at NTNU in Gjøvik. He has a MSc in signal processing from NTNU, and a PhD in signal and image processing from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Télécommunications in Paris, France. Professor Hardeberg is a member of the Norwegian Colour and Visual Computing Laboratory where he teaches, supervises graduate students, manages international study programs and research projects. He has co-authored more than 200 publications. His research interests include multispectral colour imaging, print and image quality, colorimetric device characterization, colour management, cultural heritage imaging, and medical imaging.




Demo Session on Material Appearance

4:20 – 5:20 PM
Cypress A

Talking about material appearance is good. Looking at materials and speaking about them is even better! Every innovative or traditional object, material, image or simulation is welcome to be presented in the final session of the MAAP conference. Collectively they will serve as an inspiration for future innovative objects, materials, images or simulations.




5:30 – 7:30 PM Symposium Demonstration Session

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Important Dates
Call for Papers Announced 1 Mar 2018
Journal-first Submissions Due 30 Jun 2018
Abstract Submission Site Opens 1 May 2018
Review Abstracts Due (refer to For Authors page
 · Early Decision Ends 30 Jun 2018
· Regular Submission Ends 8 Sept 2018
· Extended Submission Ends 25 Sept 2018
 Final Manuscript Deadlines  
 · Fast Track Manuscripts Due 14 Nov 2018 
 · Final Manuscripts Due 1 Feb 2019 
Registration Opens 23 Oct 2018
Early Registration Ends 18 Dec 2018
Hotel Reservation Deadline 3 Jan 2019
Conference Begins 13 Jan 2019


 
View 2019 Proceedings
View 2018 Proceedings
View 2017 Proceedings
View 2016 Proceedings

Conference Chairs
Mathieu Hebert, Université Jean Monnet de Saint Etienne (France); Ingeborg Tastl, HP Labs, HP Inc. (United States); Lionel Simonot, Université de Poitiers (France)   

Program Committee
Marc Ellens, X-Rite, Inc. (United States); Susan Farnand, Rochester Institute of Technology (United States); Roland Fleming, Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen (Germany); Jon Hardeberg, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (Norway); Francisco Imai, Apple Inc. (United States); Susanne Klein, University of the West of England (United Kingdom); Gael Obein, Conservatoire National des Arts et Metiers (France); Maria Ortiz Segovia, Océ Print Logic Technologies (France); Carinna Parraman, University of the West of England (United Kingdom); Holly Rushmeier, Yale University (United States); Takuroh Sone, Ricoh Japan (Japan); Sabine Süsstrunk, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (Switzerland); Shoji Tominaga, Chiba University (Japan); Philipp Urban, Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Graphics Research IGD (Germany)