From Computer Vision to Artificial Intelligence
Algorithms, Data, Knowledge and Reasoning
28 Jun 2024, 15:00 — Room 508, DIBRIS/DIMA Via Dodecaneso 35, 16146, Genova
Speaker:
Pietro Perona
Pietro Perona
Bio:
Professor Perona's research focuses on vision: how we see and how we can build machines that see. Professor Perona is interested in visual recognition, more specifically visual categorization. In collaboration with his students, he develops algorithms to enable machines to learn to recognize frogs, cars, faces and trees with minimal human supervision, and to enable machines to learn from human experts. His project `Visipedia' has produced two smart device apps (iNaturalist and Merlin Bird ID) that anyone can download to their smart device and use to recognize the species of plants and animals from a photograph. In collaboration with Professors Anderson and Dickinson, Professor Perona is building vision systems and statistical techniques for measuring actions and activities in fruit flies and mice. This enables geneticists and neuroethologists to investigate the relationship between genes, brains and behavior. He is also interested in studying how humans perform visual tasks, such as searching and recognizing image content. One of his recent projects studies how to harness the visual ability of thousands of people on the web to crowdsource the annotation of images. Professor Perona is committed to developing responsible artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms. He works on developing experimental methods for assessing algorithmic accuracy and bias in face recognition and other applications of computer vision.
Professor Perona's research focuses on vision: how we see and how we can build machines that see. Professor Perona is interested in visual recognition, more specifically visual categorization. In collaboration with his students, he develops algorithms to enable machines to learn to recognize frogs, cars, faces and trees with minimal human supervision, and to enable machines to learn from human experts. His project `Visipedia' has produced two smart device apps (iNaturalist and Merlin Bird ID) that anyone can download to their smart device and use to recognize the species of plants and animals from a photograph. In collaboration with Professors Anderson and Dickinson, Professor Perona is building vision systems and statistical techniques for measuring actions and activities in fruit flies and mice. This enables geneticists and neuroethologists to investigate the relationship between genes, brains and behavior. He is also interested in studying how humans perform visual tasks, such as searching and recognizing image content. One of his recent projects studies how to harness the visual ability of thousands of people on the web to crowdsource the annotation of images. Professor Perona is committed to developing responsible artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms. He works on developing experimental methods for assessing algorithmic accuracy and bias in face recognition and other applications of computer vision.