Engineering Professor Ming-Hsuan Yang of the University of California, Merced, has been named a recipient of the U.S. National Science Foundation's Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award to further his work on improving visual tracking abilities in machines.
The award will provide Yang, a computer scientist, with research funding of $473,797 over five years. Yang's research will focus on developing computer algorithms that can efficiently and effectively empower machines with object tracking, detection and recognition capabilities similar to human cognition, all with the use of only a single camera.
"Professor Yang's innovative and groundbreaking research into visual tracking is certainly deserving of this honor from the National Science Foundation," says Dan Hirleman, Dean of the School of Engineering at UC Merced. "The award represents a clear recognition and validation of the importance of this work."
While humans can effortlessly locate moving objects in different environments, visual tracking remains one of the most important and challenging problems in computer vision. Yang's algorithms would help machines handle scenarios in which the objects they are designed to track drift, disappear and reappear, or are obscured by other objects.
Yang says this research could have broad applications, including assistive technology for the visually impaired, medical purposes like cell tracking and telesurgery, tracking insect and animal motion, traffic modeling for smart buildings, and improved navigation and surveillance capabilities in robots.
"I am grateful for this NSF award which will boost our research efforts in computer vision for the next five years," Yang says.
In addition to the research itself, Yang's project would include developing a code library of tracking algorithms and a large benchmark data set, all of which would be made available to the public. Yang also plans to complement the research with a strong educational component involving both undergraduate and graduate students, with the goal of encouraging students from underrepresented minority groups in California's Central Valley to pursue studies in computer sciences and related fields.
It's not the first significant award for Yang, who came to UC Merced in 2008. He also received the Google Faculty Award in 2009, the UC Merced Academic Senate's Distinguished Early Career Research Award in 2011, the Nvidia Professor Partnership Award in 2011, and a research grant from the NSF Information and Intelligent Systems' Robust Intelligence program earlier this year.
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