What would the world look like if we had a chance to observe it with a trillion frame-per-second video camera? "Imaging the Propagation of Light through Scenes...Kyros Kutulakos From Communications of the ACM | September 2016
We present a novel imaging technique, which we call femtophotography, to capture and visualize the propagation of light through table-top scenes with an effective...Andreas Velten, Di Wu, Belen Masia, Adrian Jarabo, Christopher Barsi, Chinmaya Joshi, Everett Lawson, Moungi Bawendi, Diego Gutierrez, Ramesh Raskar From Communications of the ACM | September 2016
In "Probabilistic Theorem Proving," Gogate and Domingos suggest how PTP could be turned in a fast approximate algorithm by sampling from the set of children of...Henry Kautz, Parag Singla From Communications of the ACM | July 2016
Many representation schemes combining first-order logic and probability have been proposed in recent years. We propose the first method that has the full power...Vibhav Gogate, Pedro Domingos From Communications of the ACM | July 2016
What kinds of problems can be solved with combined human and machine computation? "AutoMan: A Platform for Integrating Human-Based and Digital Computation," by...Siddharth Suri From Communications of the ACM | June 2016
We introduce AutoMan, the first fully automatic crowdprogramming system.Daniel W. Barowy, Charlie Curtsinger, Emery D. Berger, Andrew McGregor From Communications of the ACM | June 2016
"On the Naturalness of Software" by Hindle et al. takes an entirely new approach to providing tools to help build software.Gail C. Murphy From Communications of the ACM | May 2016
We begin with the conjecture that most software is natural, with all the attendant constraints and limitations — and thus, like natural language, it is also likely...Abram Hindle, Earl T. Barr, Mark Gabel, Zhendong Su, Premkumar Devanbu From Communications of the ACM | May 2016
In "Learning to Name Objects," the authors offer a method to determine a basic-level category name for an object in an image.David Forsyth From Communications of the ACM | March 2016
This paper looks at the problem of predicting category labels that mimic how human observers would name objects.Vicente Ordonez, Wei Liu, Jia Deng, Yejin Choi, Alexander C. Berg, Tamara L. Berg From Communications of the ACM | March 2016
An important contribution of "Answering Enumeration Queries with the Crowd" is the observation that by using the crowd for the collection of new data, we are departing...Tova Milo From Communications of the ACM | January 2016
Hybrid human/computer database systems promise to greatly expand the usefulness of query processing by incorporating the crowd. Such systems raise many implementation...Beth Trushkowsky, Tim Kraska, Michael J. Franklin, Purnamrita Sarkar From Communications of the ACM | January 2016
Can a computer automatically discover and tell us what makes Paris look so much like Paris? "What Makes Paris Look Like Paris?" offers a creative, inspiring new...Noah Snavely From Communications of the ACM | December 2015
Given a large repository of geo-tagged imagery, we seek to automatically find visual elements, for example windows, balconies, and street signs, that are most distinctive...Carl Doersch, Saurabh Singh, Abhinav Gupta, Josef Sivic, Alexei A. Efros From Communications of the ACM | December 2015
"Geometric Tools for Exploring Manifolds of Light Transport Paths" presents a technique to address the challenging problems of light transport.Frédo Durand From Communications of the ACM | November 2015
We provide a geometric solution to the longstanding problem of light simulations by representing light paths as points in an abstract high-dimensional configuration...Wenzel Jakob, Steve Marschner From Communications of the ACM | November 2015
The authors of "Guided Exploration of Physically Valid Shapes for Furniture Design" have found a way to provide the user with instant feedback on how to fix unstable...Marc Alexa From Communications of the ACM | September 2015
The authors propose an interactive design framework for the efficient and intuitive exploration of geometrically and physically valid shapes.Nobuyuki Umentani, Takeo Igarashi, Niloy J. Mitra From Communications of the ACM | September 2015
Specialization improves energy-efficiency in computing but only makes economic sense if there is significant demand. A balance can often be found by designing...Trevor Mudge From Communications of the ACM | April 2015
We present the Convolution Engine (CE) — a programmable processor specialized for the convolution-like data-flow prevalent in computational photography, computer...Wajahat Qadeer, Rehan Hameed, Ofer Shacham, Preethi Venkatesan, Christos Kozyrakis, Mark Horowitz From Communications of the ACM | April 2015