3DOR 2025 Registration Now Open
The 3DOR Registration is now open,
<https://onlinestore.ucl.ac.uk/conferences-and-events/faculty-of-engineering
-c05/computer-science-f48/f48-3dor-2025> click here to register!
<https://3dor.cs.ucl.ac.uk/> 3DOR is the dedicated workshop series for
methods, applications and benchmark-based evaluation of 3D object retrieval,
classification, and similarity-based object processing. In 2025, the 3DOR
will be organized as a Symposium with the ambition to attract a larger
number of participants. The symposium also includes the 2025 edition of the
3D Shape Retrieval Challenge (SHREC), keynotes, project presentations, and a
social and networking event.
The workshop will be held on the 4th and 5th of September at University
College London (UCL) Bloomsbury Campus, which is ideally located in central
London, and is easily accessible by tube, train, bus, and taxi. More
information about the venue will be added closer to the date of the
Symposium.
Keynote Speakers
Stefanos Zafeiriou
Stefanos Zafeiriou is currently a Professor in Machine Learning and Computer
Vision with the Department of Computing, Imperial College London, London,
U.K, and an EPSRC Early Career Research Fellow. He was a recipient of the
Prestigious Junior Research Fellowships from Imperial College London in
2011. He was the recipient of the President's Medal for Excellence in
Research Supervision for 2016. He has co-authored 70 journal papers mainly
on novel statistical machine learning methodologies applied to computer
vision problems, such as 2-D/3-D face analysis, deformable object fitting
and tracking, shape from shading, and human behaviour analysis. He was
co-founder of two startups Facesoft and Ariel AI.
Yi-Zhe Song
Yi-Zhe Song is a Professor of Computer Vision and Machine Learning, at the
Centre for Vision Speech and Signal Processing (CVSSP), University of
Surrey. He leads the SketchX Lab within CVSSP - a large research group of 3
academics, 2 postdocs, and 14 full-time PhD students. His vision for SketchX
is understanding how seeing can be explained by drawing. In other words, how
better understanding of human sketch data can be translated to insights of
how human visual systems operate, and in turn how such insights can benefit
computer vision and cognitive science at large.