(Press-News.org) ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, today named Cordelia Schmid, Research Director at Inria, the French National Institute for Research in Digital Science and Technology, as the 2025-2026 ACM Athena Lecturer. Schmid is recognized for outstanding contributions to computer vision in image retrieval, object recognition, and video understanding. Her work has helped computers understand, perceive, and interact with the visual world.
Initiated in 2006, the ACM Athena Lecturer Award celebrates women researchers who have made fundamental contributions to computer science. The award includes a $25,000 honorarium provided by Two Sigma.
Computer Vision
Computer vision has captivated the public and enables innovative technologies in many fields today, including robotics, automated vehicles, and medicine. By employing special algorithms and massive amounts of data, this technology allows computers to recognize and interpret objects in photographs, videos, and the physical environment.
For humans, understanding visual information is a simple exercise, but for computers it’s a very difficult task. Schmid made foundational contributions to this field beginning in the 1990’s. Her early work with semi-local image descriptors helped classify textures and recognize patterns. Following on these insights, she also explored how these characteristics could be combined with spatial and geometric details.
Schmid’s later innovations helped computers recognize complex objects in a scene even when clutter or other visual objects are present. In turn, these accomplishments enabled computer vision technologies to process more complex and realistic settings.
Video Analysis
Within the broader field of computer vision, the goal of video analysis is focused specifically on recognizing actions and events in real-world video footage. Schmid’s significant contributions in video analysis include designing methods and training computers to identify such actions and events. From still images to sequences, her work has played a large role in the advancements of modern image detection that technologies from digital video cameras to industrial robotics use today.
Leadership
In keeping with the Athena Lecturer Award’s goal of honoring both technical and service contributions, Schmid is recognized for building an active research community. For example, the research groups she founded lead the world, and she has contributed extensively to the field, editing its major journals and chairing its most important conferences. Schmid’s skills in mentorship and supervision are also renowned among her peers.
Biographical Background
Cordelia Schmid is a Research Director at Inria, the French National Institute for Research in Digital Science and Technology, and a Director at Google. She also serves as a Director of the ELLIS program on Machine Learning and Computer Vision and as a member of the Board of Directors for the Computer Vision Foundation.
Schmid earned a PhD in Computer Science from the Institute National Polytechnique de Grenoble (France), and an MS in Computer Science from the University of Karlsruhe (Germany). Among her many honors, Schmid is the only three-time recipient of the prestigious Longuet-Higgins Prize and a recipient of the Koenderink Prize, both awarded for fundamental contributions in computer vision. She has also received the European Inventor Award. She is a Fellow of IEEE and a Member of the German National Academy of Sciences, Leopoldina.
Schmid will formally receive the Athena Lecturer Award at ACM’s annual awards banquet on June 14, 2025 in San Francisco.
About the ACM Athena Lecturer Award
The ACM Athena Lecturer Award celebrates women researchers who have made fundamental contributions to computer science. It includes a $25,000 honorarium provided by Two Sigma. The Athena Lecturer is invited to present a lecture at an ACM event. Each year, the Athena Lecturer honors a preeminent woman computer scientist. Athena is the Greek goddess of wisdom; with her knowledge and sense of purpose, she epitomizes the strength, determination, and intelligence of the “Athena Lecturers.”
About ACM
ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, is the world’s largest educational and scientific computing society, uniting computing educators, researchers, and professionals to inspire dialogue, share resources, and address the field’s challenges. ACM strengthens the computing profession’s collective voice through strong leadership, promotion of the highest standards, and recognition of technical excellence. ACM supports the professional growth of its members by providing opportunities for life-long learning, career development, and professional networking.
# # #
END
Depression involves a complex interplay of psychological patterns, biological vulnerabilities and social stressors, making its causes and symptoms highly variable. Equally complex is the treatment of depression, which requires a highly individualized approach that may involve a combination of medication, psychotherapy and lifestyle changes.
In a decade-long multi-institutional study, U of A psychologists teamed up with Radboud University in the Netherlands to develop a precision treatment approach for depression that gives patients individualized recommendations based on multiple characteristics, ...
MINNEAPOLIS — Having a larger waistline, high blood pressure and other risk factors that make up metabolic syndrome is associated with an increased risk of young-onset dementia, according to a study published on April 23, 2025, online in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Young-onset dementia is diagnosed before the age of 65. The study does not prove that metabolic syndrome causes young-onset dementia, it only shows an association.
Metabolic syndrome is defined as having excess belly fat plus two or more of the following risk factors: high blood pressure, high blood sugar, higher than normal ...
Rising temperatures could tip the scale in an underground battle that has raged for millennia. In the soils of Earth’s wetlands, microbes are fighting to both produce and consume the powerful greenhouse gas methane. But if the Earth gets too hot, a key way wetlands clamp down on methane could be at risk, according to a Smithsonian study published April 23.
Methane is responsible for roughly 19% of global warming, according to the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration. And while wetlands are champions at removing carbon dioxide (CO2)—the more abundant greenhouse gas—they are ...
Neurodegenerative disease like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) are debilitating conditions that affect millions of people worldwide every year. These pathologies are notoriously difficult to prevent or effectively treat due to a complex interplay of genetics, lifestyle, co-infection, and many other factors impacting everything from diagnosis to treatment.
While a comprehensive cure-all to these neurological conditions is unlikely, scientists are making headway into understanding their fundamental ...
Water quality could be degraded by development and conversion of forests upstream, with sediment levels and nitrogen concentrations also worsened, per modelling analysis of the Middle Chattahoochee watershed of Georgia, Alabama, and Florida.
####
Article URL: https://plos.io/3Gi6Kaq
Article Title: Projected land use changes will cause water quality degradation at drinking water intakes across a regional watershed
Author Countries: United States
Funding: This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) ...
Current ‘gold standard’ treatment does not work for up to 20% of population and kills beneficial bacteria
Scientists screened nearly 500 FDA-approved compounds to assess effectiveness against Lyme
Piperacillin effectively treats Lyme disease at 100-times lower dose than doxycycline
CHICAGO --- Lyme disease, a disease transmitted when deer ticks feed on infected animals like deer and rodents, and then bite humans, impacts nearly half a million individuals in the U.S. annually. Even in acute cases, Lyme can be devastating; but early treatment with antibiotics can prevent chronic symptoms like heart and neurological problems and arthritis from developing.
Scientists ...
Up to 20% of patients treated for Lyme experience persistent symptoms
Lyme’s post-infection features share some similarities to long COVID-19 and could be due to lingering antigens
Individual differences in immune response to remnants of the Lyme bacterium’s cell wall likely play an important role in patient outcome.
CHICAGO --- Symptoms that persist long after Lyme disease is treated are not uncommon — a 2022 study found that 14% of patients who were diagnosed and treated early with antibiotic therapy would still develop Post Treatment Lyme Disease (PTLD). Yet doctors ...
Inspired by the movements of a tiny parasitic worm, Georgia Tech engineers have created a 5-inch soft robot that can jump as high as a basketball hoop.
Their device, a silicone rod with a carbon-fiber spine, can leap 10 feet high even though it doesn’t have legs. The researchers made it after watching high-speed video of nematodes pinching themselves into odd shapes to fling themselves forward and backward.
The researchers described the soft robot April 23 in Science Robotics. They said their findings could help develop robots capable of jumping across various terrain, at different heights, in multiple directions.
“Nematodes are ...
A team at UC San Francisco and Gladstone Institutes has developed new drug candidates that show great promise against the virus that causes COVID-19 and potentially other coronaviruses that could cause future pandemics.
In preclinical testing, the compounds performed better than Paxlovid against SARS-CoV-2 and the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) virus, which periodically causes deadly outbreaks around the world.
“In three years, we’ve moved as fast as a pharmaceutical company would have, from start to finish, developing drug candidates against a totally new pathogen,” said Charles Craik, PhD, UCSF professor ...
This release has been removed upon request of the submitting institution because it is a duplicate of an existing release. Please find the link here to the release: https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1081239 Please contact Levi Gadye, levi.gadye@ucsf.edu for more information. END ...