A description of it is:
The group's purpose is to foster exchange between researchers and engineers on the rapidly evolving field of Compressive Sensing. The current implementation of this technology spans a wide range of Technology Readiness Levels across a wide variety of engineering fields (Imaging, Oil/gas exploration, Electrical Engineering....) as well as Theoretical Computer Science and Mathematics.
If you have a better description or logo, please let me know.
What would you do if you were a student or looking for a job in the Cambridge (US) area and are reading this blog often ? maybe you could be interested in taking up the following internship. Amit Agrawal whom I featured here before has an opening for Fall Internship (2008) at Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs (MERL)
Aug 2008 - Jan 2009
We are looking for a student with experience and interest in one or more of the following topics
Computational Imaging/Photography
Active illumination
LightFields and Applications
Motion Deblurring
Coded Aperture Techniques
Project details are at http://www.merl.com/people/agrawal/index.html
- The student research background should include computer vision and image processing projects.
- Programming experience in Matlab, C/C++
- The student may also submit his/her own proposal for a research project.
- Competitive pay, fun working environment.
Please send email to agrawal at merl dot com with resume, dates of availability and area of interest.
Even though, it is not a requirement to know about Compressive Sensing, I added this internship to CSjobs.
Stanley Osher reminded me I should link to the repository of Recent reports of the Computational and Applied Mathematics department at UCLA since it has a many papers on "Bregman, L1, TV, compressed sensing, NL means." I just set my webcrawler to look at it everyday.
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