Md Atiqur Rahman Ahad, Ph.D., Senior Member, IEEE, Senior Member, OPTICA (formerly OSA), is a Professor of Electrical & Electronic Engineering, University of Dhaka (DU). He is currently working as a specially appointed Associate Professor at Osaka University, Japan. He works on computer vision, imaging, IoT, healthcare, etc. He was awarded the prestigious UGC Gold Medal (handed by Honorable President of Bangladesh in 2018), JSPS Postdoctoral Fellowship, and a no. of awards/scholarships. He was a Visiting Researcher at KIT. He has published over ten books and ~200 journal articles, conference papers and book chapters. He has received ~40 international awards in various conferences/journals/societies. Ahad was invited as keynote/invited speakers ~110 times in different conferences/universities. He has established several international MOU/collaborations (e.g., Clemson University, University of Hyogo, RCCIIT, Fukuoka Women University, Kyushu University, etc.). Website: http://ahadVisionLab.com Upal Mahbub, Ph.D., Senior Member IEEE, is currently working as a Senior Engineer at the Multimedia R&D Lab at Qualcomm Technologies Inc., San Diego, California, USA. He received his Ph.D. (2018) and an M.Sc. (2017) degrees in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Maryland College Park. Before joining the Ph.D. program, Dr. Mahbub was an Assistant Professor at the Dept. of EEE, Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, Dhaka, Bangladesh. Upal Mahbub is the recipient of the best paper award at IEEE UEMCON 2016, the best poster award at BTAS 2016, the best paper award at ICCIT 2011, and a distinguished graduate fellowship from the A. James Clark School of Engineering at the University of Maryland. He has published over thirty articles in international conferences and prestigious journals, recently published an edited book entitled “Contactless Human Activity Analysis”, served as editor in international journals (guest editor of PRL special issue AHAAGR 2021, associate editor of IJCVSP), presented his research at numerous conferences, and served in the technical and/or program committees of ICIEV (2012-2021), IVPR (track chair 202, program chair 2021), ICECE (2010 & 2012), and ABC (2019, 2020, 2021). Matthew Turk, Ph.D., Fellow, IEEE; Fellow, Fellow IAPR, is the President of the Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago (TTIC) and an emeritus professor in computer science at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he co-directed the UCSB Four Eyes Lab. He received a PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has worked at Martin Marietta Aerospace, LIFIA/ENSIMAG (Grenoble, France), Teleos Research, and Microsoft Research, where he was a founder of the Vision Technology Group. He has served as General or Program Chair of several major conferences, including the ACM Multimedia Conference, the IEEE Conference on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition, the ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction, the IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, and the IEEE Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision. He co-founded an augmented reality startup company in 2014 that was acquired by PTC Vuforia in 2016. Dr. Turk has received several best paper awards, and he is an ACM Fellow, an IEEE Fellow, an IAPR Fellow, and the recipient of the 2011-2012 Fulbright-Nokia Distinguished Chair in Information and Communications Technologies. Richard Hartley, Ph.D., Fellow, IEEE; Fellow, Australian Academy of Science; Fellow, Australian Mathematical Society, is a member of the computer vision group in the Department of Information Engineering, at the Australian National University, where he has been since January 2001. He did his doctoral research in Mathematics at the University of Toronto, Canada in 1976. He also received an MSc in Mathematics from the same university in 1972 and another MSc in Computer Science from Stanford University in 1985. Dr. Hartley worked at the General Electric Research and Development Center from 1985 to 2001. During the period 1985-1988, he was involved in the design and implementation of Computer-Aided Design tools for electronic design and created a very successful design system called the Parsifal Silicon Compiler. In 1991 he was awarded GE's Dushman Award for this work.
“This book contains fifteen chapters written by academic leaders and seasoned industrial practitioners of Computer Vision. They cover the diversity of today’s application areas. Each chapter presents a comprehensive overview of existing systems and state of the art methodologies as well as future trends. This timely book will be enjoyed by today’s researchers, practitioners, and students of Computer Vision.” --Takeo Kanade, U. A. and Helen Whitaker University Professor, Carnegie Mellon University