PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Digital photos can animate a face so it ages and moves before your eyes

Digital photos can animate a face so it ages and moves before your eyes
2011-08-04
(Press-News.org) Personal photos occupy an ever-expanding amount of hard drive space. Baby, family and vacation photos can now number in the thousands. While some poke fun at the digital glut, others see a unique opportunity.

Researchers at the University of Washington have created a way to take hundreds or thousands of digital portraits and in seconds create an animation of the person's face.

The tool can make a face appear to age over time, or choose images from the same period to make the person's expression gradually change from a smile to a frown.

The researchers were inspired, in part, by people who snap a photo of themselves each day and then align them to create a movie where they appear to age onscreen. They sought an automated way to get the same effect.

"I have 10,000 photos of my 5-year-old son, taken over every possible expression," said co-author Steve Seitz, a UW professor of computer science and engineering and engineer in Google's Seattle office. "I would like to visualize how he changes over time, be able to see all the expressions he makes, be able to see him in 3-D or animate him from the photos."

Lead author Ira Kemelmacher-Shlizerman, a UW postdoctoral researcher in computer science and engineering, will present the research next week in Vancouver, B.C., at the meeting of SIGGRAPH, the Special Interest Group on Graphics and Interactive Techniques.

"The vast majority of photos include faces – family, friends, kids, people who are close to us," Kemelmacher-Shlizerman said.

The new project is in the same spirit as earlier UW research that automatically stitched together tourist photos of buildings to recreate an entire scene in 3-D. That work led to Microsoft's Photosynth. Faces present additional challenges, Kemelmacher-Shlizerman said, because they move, change and age over time.

Luckily, face detection technology is improving. Picasa and iPhoto added face-recognition tools a few years ago; Windows Live Photo Gallery and, most recently, Facebook, can now automatically tag photos with people's names.

"This work provides a motivation for tagging," Seitz said. "The bigger goal is to figure out how to browse and organize your photo collection. I think this is just one initial step toward that bigger goal."

The software starts with photos from the web or personal collections that are tagged with the same person. It locates the face and major features, then aligns the faces and chooses photos with similar expressions so the transitions are smooth. The tool uses a standard cross-dissolve, or fade, between images, which the researchers discovered can produce a surprisingly smooth transition that gives the appearance of motion.

An example video uses photos of a Google employee's daughter taken from birth to age twenty. The owner scanned the older photos to create digital versions, tagged them with the subject's name and manually added the dates. The result is a movie in which the subject ages two decades in less than a minute.

For modern babies, who are digitally chronicled from before birth, such films will be much easier to create.

One version of the tool is already available to the public. Last year during a six-month internship at Google's Seattle office, co-author Rahul Garg, a UW doctoral student in computer science and engineering, worked with Kemelmacher-Shlizerman and Seitz to add a feature called Face Movie to the company's photo tool, Picasa.

The Face Movie version includes some simplifications to make it run more quickly. It also plays every photo tagged with the person's name, but not necessarily in chronological order.

The upcoming talk will be the first academic presentation of the research, which has potential applications in the growing overlap between real and digital experiences.

"There's been a lot of interest in the computer vision community in modeling faces, but almost all of the projects focus on specially acquired photos, taken under carefully controlled conditions," Seitz said. "This is one of the first papers to focus on unstructured photo collections, taken under different conditions, of the type that you would find in iPhoto or Facebook."

Related research by Kemelmacher-Shlizerman and Seitz, to be presented this fall at the International Conference on Computer Vision, goes one step further, harnessing personal photos to build a 3-D model of a face. Such models could be used to create more realistic avatars, simplify transmission of people's faces during video conferencing, or develop better techniques for recognizing faces that appear in digital photos.



INFORMATION:

Eli Shechtman at Adobe Systems is a co-author on the paper presented this month. The research was funded by Google Inc., Microsoft Corp., Adobe Systems Inc. and the National Science Foundation.



For more information, contact Kemelmacher-Shlizerman at kemelmi@cs.washington.edu or 206-543-6876 and Seitz at seitz@cs.washington.edu or 206-616-9431.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Digital photos can animate a face so it ages and moves before your eyes

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

COPD patients with sense of humor feel better, but laughter may be bad for lungs

2011-08-04
COPD PATIENTS WITH SENSE OF HUMOR FEEL BETTER, BUT LAUGHTER MAY BE BAD FOR LUNGS COLUMBUS, Ohio – Having a sense of humor is associated with improved emotional functioning and an enhanced quality of life among patients with a chronic lung illness, but the actual act of laughing out loud can reduce lung function, at least in the short term, research suggests. The study evaluated humor and laughter in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD. Participants who exhibited a greater sense of humor were more likely to report fewer symptoms of depression ...

Can eggs be a healthy breakfast choice?

Can eggs be a healthy breakfast choice?
2011-08-04
Tel Aviv — Eggs, one of the most commonly consumed breakfast foods in the United States, have long been a subject of controversy. Are they healthy or are they a high-cholesterol trap? The answer depends on what the hen eats, says a Tel Aviv University researcher. Dr. Niva Shapira of Tel Aviv University's School of Health Professions says that all eggs are not created equal. Her research indicates that when hens are fed with a diet low in omega-6 fatty acids from a young age — feed high in wheat, barley, and milo and lower in soy, maize and sunflower, safflower, and maize ...

Scientists probe the energy transfer process in photosynthetic proteins

2011-08-04
College Park, Md. (August 2, 2011) -- Researchers have developed a new method to probe the fundamental workings of photosynthesis. The new experimental technique could help scientists better understand the nitty-gritty details of nature's amazingly efficient sunlight-to-fuel conversion system. Plants and other photosynthetic organisms grow by harvesting the sun's energy and storing it in chemical bonds. Antenna proteins, which are made up of multiple light-absorbing pigments, capture sunlight over a large surface area and then transfer the energy through a series of molecules ...

Study: Inexpensive method detects ALK rearrangement in lung cancer patients

2011-08-04
A relatively simple and inexpensive method may be used to determine whether a lung cancer patient is a candidate for crizotinib therapy, according to research published in the August issue of the Journal of Thoracic Oncology, the official monthly journal of the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer (IASLC). Lung cancer patients with ALK rearrangement have been found to respond well to crizotinib, an ALK inhibitor currently in clinical trials. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) has been considered the gold standard method for detecting ALK rearrangement. "However, ...

UNH researchers help find natural products potential of frankia

2011-08-04
DURHAM, N.H. – Soil-dwelling bacteria of the genus Frankia have the potential to produce a multitude of natural products, including antibiotics, herbicides, pigments, anticancer agents, and other useful products, according to an article in the June 2011 issue of the journal "Applied and Environmental Microbiology." University of New Hampshire professor of microbiology and genetics Louis Tisa, a Frankia expert, contributed the genomic analysis to this study. "We were able to use cutting-edge techniques to identify unexpected compounds in this organism, Frankia," Tisa says. ...

Are pet owners healthier and happier? Maybe not…

2011-08-04
For many people, Fido and Fluffy are more than just pets, they're true and equal members of the family. And it's not hard to see why. Our pets greet us at the door after a long day of work, settle in our laps while we're watching TV, or 'sing' along when we hum a tune. They provide companionship and even a sense of comfort. We like to believe that our pets are good for us, that they enrich our lives and make us happier, and messages in media and advertising reinforce these beliefs. But is there really a universal 'pet effect' on human mental and physical health? According ...

African rodent uses 'poison arrow' toxin to deter predators

African rodent uses poison arrow toxin to deter predators
2011-08-04
Woe to the clueless predator trying to make a meal of the African crested rat, a rodent that applies poisonous plant toxin to sponge-like hairs on its flanks, a discovery recently made by Jonathan Kingdon and colleagues from the National Museums of Kenya, the Wildlife Conservation Society, and University of Oxford. In the only known instance of a mammal acquiring a lethal toxin from a plant for defense, the researchers have discovered where the African crested rat (or maned rat) gets its poison: the Acokanthera tree, the same source used by East African hunters for ...

What's in a kids meal? Not happy news

2011-08-04
High-calorie, high-sodium choices were on the menu when parents purchased lunch for their children at a San Diego fast-food restaurant. Why? Because both children and adults liked the food and the convenience. However, the study of data compiled by researchers in the Department of Pediatrics at the University of California, San Diego, appearing this week in the new journal, Childhood Obesity, showed that convenience resulted in lunchtime meals that accounted for between 36 and 51 percent of a child's daily caloric needs. In addition, 35 to 39 percent of calories came ...

First large study to find HIV epidemic among gays in the Middle East

2011-08-04
NEW YORK (Aug. 2, 2011) -- HIV epidemics are emerging in several countries in the Middle East and North Africa among men who have sex with men, a term that encompasses gay, non-gay identified homosexual men, and transgendered and bisexual men. Though HIV infection levels were historically very low in the Middle East and North Africa, substantial levels of HIV transmission have been found, beginning in 2003, among men who have sex with men, a hidden and stigmatized population in this part of the world. These findings are published today in PLoS Medicine and represent the ...

Georgia Tech proposes Internet consumer nutrition label

2011-08-04
When it comes to broadband speeds, U.S. Internet service providers (ISPs) largely deliver on their promises, says a report issued today by the Federal Communications Commission, but "throughput" is only one of several metrics listed in the report that affect network performance. ISPs should provide a broadband "nutrition label"—easy-to-understand information about service-limiting factors—and users need better ways of measuring the performance their ISPs are delivering, concludes a study from the Georgia Tech College of Computing. Out of some 2 billion Internet users ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Diamond continues to shine: new properties discovered in diamond semiconductors

Researchers find the key to Artificial Intelligence’s learning power – an inbuilt, special kind of Occam’s razor

Genetic tweak optimizes drug-making cells by blocking buildup of toxic byproduct

University of Birmingham researchers awarded grant to tackle early-stage heart disease in chronic kidney disease

Researchers harness AI to predict cardiovascular risk from CT scans

Samsung takes top spot in U.S. patents for third year running while TSMC rises into second place; after four-year falloff, grants increase nearly 4%

HKU ecologist highlights critical gaps in global wildlife trade monitoring

Smoking may lead people to earn less

Hiroshima flooding: A case study of well usage and adaptive governance

New survey finds over half of Americans are unaware that bariatric surgery can improve fertility

World’s oldest 3D map discovered

Metabolomics-driven approaches for identifying therapeutic targets in drug discovery

Applications of ultrafast nano-spectroscopy and nano-imaging

Study links PFAS contamination of drinking water to a range of rare cancers

Scientists explain how a compound from sea sponge exerts its biological effects

Why older women are embracing the open road

Shift to less reliable ‘natural’ contraception methods among abortion patients over past 5 years

Tobacco advertising + sponsorship bans linked to 20% lower odds of smoking

Vascular ‘fingerprint’ at the back of the eye can accurately predict stroke risk

Circulation problems in the brain’s seat of memory linked to mild cognitive impairment in older adults

Oregon State receives $11.9 million from Defense Department to enhance health of armed forces

Leading cancer clinician, researcher Dr. Jenny Chang to lead Houston Methodist Academic Institute

Engineering quantum entanglement at the nanoscale

Researchers develop breakthrough one-step flame retardant for cotton textiles

New study identifies how blood vessel dysfunction can worsen chronic disease

Picking the right doctor? AI could help

Travel distance to nearest lung cancer facility differs by racial and ethnic makeup of communities

UTA’s student success strategy earns national acclaim

Wind turbines impair the access of bats to water bodies in agricultural landscapes

UCF biology researchers win awards from NOAA to support critical coastal work

[Press-News.org] Digital photos can animate a face so it ages and moves before your eyes