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The 3DIM Conference was launched in 1997 as a forum for researchers from academic, industrial and national laboratories in the fields of computer vision, computer graphics, photogrammetry and geometric modeling, as well as for end users in application areas. Contributions to the five previous 3DIM Conferences reflect the theoretical developments, technological innovations, and applications arising in 3-D imaging, modeling and visualization. While some research issues have received significant attention and matured into stable solutions, new problems and goals are emerging as the focus of the 3-D research community. The tenth anniversary of the 3DIM Conference is the occasion to evaluate the progress accomplished, identify the challenges that lie ahead, and share innovative approaches. The 3DIM 2007 Conference Committee invites you to submit high quality original full papers by April 2, 2007. The papers will be reviewed by an international Program Committee. Accepted papers will be presented in single-track oral sessions as well as extended poster sessions (all papers are allocated the same number of pages). The Conference Proceedings will be published by the IEEE Computer Society Press and archived in their Digital Library. Full details on the paper format, electronic submission procedure and conference venue are available on the paper submission page. Papers
are
invited in the areas of:
as well as related areas. This year, we are particularly seeking papers on the themes of: 1. appearance modeling of 3-D surfaces from observation, combined or not with geometric modeling; 2. deformable models, including modeling of deformable objects as well as mathematical/computational optimization approaches for surface evolution; 3. high speed and real-time systems for capturing the 3-D shape of deformable and/or moving objects. The conference will also host invited speakers in the areas of interest to the conference: Kyros Kutulakos (U. of Toronto) Sébastien Roy (U. de Montréal) Hans-Peter Seidel (Max-Planck Institut Informatik) Demetri Terzopoulos (UCLA) Luc Van Gool (K.U. Leuven/ETH Zurich)
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