Dr. David Doermann
Professor, Empire Innovation at Univ at Buffalo
SPIE Involvement:
Author | Instructor
Websites:
Publications (22)

Proceedings Article | 24 March 2014 Paper
Rajiv Jain, Douglas Oard, David Doermann
Proceedings Volume 9021, 90210K (2014) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2038656
KEYWORDS: Image retrieval, Optical character recognition, Feature extraction, Image segmentation, Visualization, Legal, Image processing algorithms and systems, Detection and tracking algorithms, Patents, Optical filters

Proceedings Article | 24 January 2011 Paper
Jayant Kumar, Rohit Prasad, Huiagu Cao, Wael Abd-Almageed, David Doermann, Premkumar Natarajan
Proceedings Volume 7874, 787406 (2011) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.876725
KEYWORDS: Image segmentation, Feature extraction, Neodymium, Optical character recognition, Image classification, Visualization, Analytical research, Classification systems, Electronic imaging, Current controlled current source

Proceedings Article | 16 January 2006 Paper
Stefan Jaeger, Guangyu Zhu, David Doermann, Kevin Chen, Summit Sampat
Proceedings Volume 6067, 606709 (2006) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.649731
KEYWORDS: Image processing, Software development, Image segmentation, Computer programming, Image storage, Image visualization, Binary data, Imaging systems, Detection and tracking algorithms, Standards development

Proceedings Article | 16 January 2006 Paper
Proceedings Volume 6067, 60670B (2006) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.643537
KEYWORDS: Databases, Hough transforms, Sensors, Edge detection, Image processing, Statistical analysis, Binary data, Feature extraction, Image quality, Detection and tracking algorithms

Proceedings Article | 17 January 2005 Paper
Proceedings Volume 5676, (2005) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.586345
KEYWORDS: Image segmentation, Optical filters, Optical character recognition, Feature extraction, Image classification, Image filtering, Image processing algorithms and systems, Spatial frequencies, Neural networks, Neurons

Showing 5 of 22 publications
Conference Committee Involvement (20)
Document Recognition and Retrieval XXI
5 February 2014 | San Francisco, California, United States
Document Recognition and Retrieval XX
5 February 2013 | Burlingame, California, United States
Document Recognition and Retrieval XIX
25 January 2012 | Burlingame, California, United States
Multimedia on Mobile Devices 2012
25 January 2012 | Burlingame, California, United States
Document Recognition and Retrieval XVIII
26 January 2011 | San Francisco Airport, California, United States
Showing 5 of 20 Conference Committees
Course Instructor
SC1098: Document and Image Processing and Analysis on Android Devices
This is a hands-on course that will explore the basis of image processing on Android devices. The increasing availability of high-performance, low-priced, portable digital imaging devices has created a tremendous opportunity for supplementing traditional imaging for scene and document image acquisition. Digital cameras attached to cellular phones, PDAs, or wearable computers, and standalone image or video devices are highly mobile and easy to use. For text based applications, for example, these devices can capture images of business documents, thick books, historical manuscripts too fragile to touch, and text in scenes, making them much more versatile than desktop scanners. Robust solutions to the analysis of documents captured with such devices are becoming available, creating demand in multiple domains. Traditional scanner-based document analysis techniques provide us with a good reference and starting point, but they cannot be used directly on camera-captured images. Camera-captured images can suffer from low resolution, blur, and perspective distortion, as well as complex layout and interaction of the content and background. For scene based applications, these devices are slow replacing a significant segment of the traditional digital camera market, with the advantage of on board processing that can significantly expand the number of applications. This course will highlight the state of the art including a survey of application domains, technical challenges, and solutions for the analysis of scenes and documents captured by digital cameras baseline for development of such applications on Android devices. We will begin by describing typical imaging devices and the imaging process, then discuss document analysis from a single camera-captured image, as well as multiple frames and highlight some sample applications under development, and feasible ideas for future development. The second half of the course will focus on a hand-on tutorial for basic image acquisition and processing on Android devices. We will enable the audience to write their own "instagram" on Android devices. Course Topics include imaging process; mobile imaging devices including capabilities, differences between scanner and camera captured images; enhancement – rectification, lighting, document mosaicing, processing of images on the device, and other symbologies; 1D and barcodes; applications; and market analysis and business opportunities.
SC808: Document and Image Analysis on Mobile Devices
The increasing availability of high-performance, low-priced, portable digital imaging devices has created a tremendous opportunity for supplementing traditional scanning for document image acquisition. Digital cameras attached to cellular phones, PDAs, or wearable computers, and standalone image or video devices are highly mobile and easy to use. These devices can capture images of thick books, historical manuscripts too fragile to touch, and text in scenes, making them much more versatile than desktop scanners. Robust solutions to the analysis of documents captured with such devices are becoming available, creating demand in multiple domains. Traditional scanner-based document analysis techniques provide us with a good reference and starting point, but they cannot be used directly on camera-captured images. Camera-captured images can suffer from low resolution, blur, and perspective distortion, as well as complex layout and interaction of the content and background. This course will highlight the state of the art including a survey of application domains, technical challenges, and solutions for the analysis of documents captured by digital cameras. We will begin by describing typical imaging devices and the imaging process, then discuss document analysis from a single camera-captured image, as well as multiple frames and highlight some sample applications under development, and feasible ideas for future development. Course Topics include imaging process; mobile imaging devices including capabilities, differences between scanner and camera captured document images; enhancement – rectification, lighting, document mosaicing, processing of images on the device, and other symbologies; 1D and barcodes; applications; and market analysis and business opportunities.
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