Dr. Marius Tico
SPIE Involvement:
Author | Instructor
Publications (6)

Proceedings Article | 8 September 2010 Paper
Daniel Vaquero, Matthew Turk, Kari Pulli, Marius Tico, Natasha Gelfand
Proceedings Volume 7798, 779814 (2010) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.862419
KEYWORDS: Image segmentation, Visualization, Facial recognition systems, Video, Sensors, Image visualization, Digital imaging, Computer programming, Mobile devices, Photography

Proceedings Article | 27 February 2008 Paper
Proceedings Volume 6821, 682108 (2008) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.764872
KEYWORDS: Cameras, Video, Human-machine interfaces, Mobile devices, Panoramic photography, Facial recognition systems, Mobile communications, Image processing, Image resolution, Motion estimation

Proceedings Article | 28 February 2007 Paper
Proceedings Volume 6498, 649807 (2007) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.703527
KEYWORDS: Panoramic photography, Video, Motion detection, Cell phones, Image registration, Cameras, MATLAB, Distortion, Image quality, Detection and tracking algorithms

Proceedings Article | 20 February 2007 Paper
Marius Tico, Markku Vehvilainen
Proceedings Volume 6502, 65020V (2007) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.703494
KEYWORDS: Point spread functions, Image registration, Motion estimation, Signal to noise ratio, Cameras, Motion models, Deconvolution, Image processing, Motion measurement, Image filtering

SPIE Journal Paper | 1 January 2003
Corneliu Rusu, Marius Tico, Pauli Kuosmanen, Edward Delp
JEI, Vol. 12, Issue 01, (January 2003) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.10.1117/1.1525792
KEYWORDS: Data centers, Error analysis, Distance measurement, Phase modulation, Signal processing, Hough transforms, Data modeling, Electronics, Telecommunications, Computer engineering

Showing 5 of 6 publications
Conference Committee Involvement (3)
Mobile Devices and Multimedia: Enabling Technologies, Algorithms, and Applications 2015
10 February 2015 | San Francisco, California, United States
Mobile Devices and Multimedia: Enabling Technologies, Algorithms, and Applications 2014
3 February 2014 | San Francisco, California, United States
Multimedia on Mobile Devices 2013
4 February 2013 | Burlingame, California, United States
Course Instructor
SC1021: Mobile Computational Photography
This course explains mobile computational photography and how it differs from traditional off-line computational photography. In mobile computational photography the camera sensor, display, a computational unit, and devices (such as lens, flash, and sensors including accelerometers or gyroscopes) work jointly with a user in an interactive loop, where several images are taken quickly with changing camera parameters. A mobile computational photography system then creates in real- or near-real-time new images that could not have been obtained from a single shot camera. Examples include high dynamic range (HDR) and panoramic photography. In this course we explain the typical image processing pipeline from the image sensor, through the image signal processor to images that can be displayed and stored. We also present the FCam architecture for precise, deterministic, and fast camera control, which is key for many computational photography tasks. We describe several algorithms such as denoising, demosaicking, auto-focusing, auto-exposure, and auto-whitebalance, and how some of them need to be modified for burst photography as they were originally developed for single-image photography. Finally, we discuss various tools available for image processing: both in the form of libraries and domain specific programming languages.
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