At the European Conference on Computer Vision (ECCV) running this week in Milan, the NVIDIA Research team is demonstrating groundbreaking innovations with 14 accepted publications.
The topics presented range from embodied AI and foundation models to retrieval-augmented generation and neural radiance fields. The majority of the presented work is focused on automotive research, including:
In addition, Tsung-Yi Lin, principal research scientist at NVIDIA, has been awarded the Koenderink Prize, a Test of Time award that honors fundamental contributions in computer vision. The prize is awarded biannually for an impactful paper published 10 years ago at ECCV. This year’s prize recognizes the 2014 publication Microsoft COCO: Common Objects in Context, coauthored by Lin.
NVIDIA researchers are co-organizing and speaking in a number of ECCV workshops. Of note is the Workshop on Cooperative Intelligence for Embodied AI, which focuses on cooperative intelligence within multi-agent autonomous systems. The Workshop on Vision-Centric Autonomous Driving covers visual perception and vision-language models for autonomous driving, as well as neural rendering of driving scenes.
Laura Leal-Taixé, senior research manager at NVIDIA, is the general chair of the conference. NVIDIA’s Jan Kautz, vice president of learning and perception research; Jose Alvarez, director of AV applied research; Sanja Fidler, vice president of AI research; and Marco Pavone, director of AV research, are on organizing committees.
See the full list of NVIDIA’s ECCV-accepted publications:
Learn more about NVIDIA Research and watch the NVIDIA DRIVE Labs video series.
Image credit: The NeRFect Match: Exploring NeRF Features for Visual Localization.