Prof. Mark Plumbley, Centre for Vision, Speech and Signal Processing, University of Surrey, UK.
Dr Helen Cooper, Centre for Vision, Speech and Signal Processing, University of Surrey, UK.
This one-day workshop will bring together researchers working in the area of sparse representations and compressed sensing to find out about the latest developments in theory and applications of these approaches, and to explore directions for future research.
The concept of sparse representations deals with systems of linear equations where only a small number of the coefficients are non-zero. The technique of compressed sensing aims to efficiently sense and reconstruct a signal from few measurements, typically by exploiting the sparse structure of the underlying representation. These techniques have proved very popular over the last decade or so, with new theoretical developments, and successful applications in areas such as hyperspectral imaging, brain imaging, audio signal processing and graph signal processing.
This one-day workshop, organized by the SpaRTaN and MacSeNet Initial/Innovative Training Networks*, will include invited keynote talks by Karin Schnass (Universität Innsbruck, Austria) and Jean-Luc Starck (CEA-Saclay, France), oral presentations and posters. The talks and posters will include theoretical advances in sparse representations, dictionary learning and compressed sensing, as well as advances in areas such as brain imaging and MRI, hyperspectral imaging, audio and visual signal processing, inverse imaging problems, and graph-structured signals.
The workshop will take place at INRIA, 2 rue Simone Iff, 75012 Paris, 10:00 - 16:30 and there will be an opportunity for discussions to continue after the end of the formal workshop. Please register your intention to attend via Eventbrite.
PhD students and Early Career Researchers wishing to bring along a poster of their work for the poster session are encouraged to contact macsenet@surrey.ac.uk with a brief abstract of their work. Posters do not need to be novel: this is an opportunity to showcase work and discuss it with others in the field.
* European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7-PEOPLE-2013-ITN) under grant agreement n° 607290 SpaRTaN and H2020 Framework Programme (H2020-MSCA-ITN-2014) under grant agreement n° 642685 MacSeNet
The workshop is being held at INRIA, 2 Rue Simone IFF, 75012 Paris, France
Please register your intention to attend via Eventbrite so that we can arrange catering and prepare your name badge.
PhD students and Early Career Researchers wishing to bring along a poster of their work for the poster session are encouraged to contact macsenet@surrey.ac.uk with a brief abstract of their work. Posters do not need to be novel: this is an opportunity to showcase work and discuss it with others in the field.
The boards are portrait with size : 1m wide by 2m tall so they will fit A0 portrait (or a bit larger).
There are lots of resources on the web for how best to design a poster I've collected a few here but do take a look around yourself and if you find any other nice tutorials please let us know so we can share them:
University of Leicester's 20 min tutorial Berkley's how to design a poster slides A nice blog post covering the same as the above for those who like the texty approach
Friday 23rd March |
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10:00 | Registration & Coffee |
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10:30 | Welcome | Francis Bach (INRIA) & Mark Plumbley (Uni. Surrey) |
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10:40 | Keynote: Dictionary Learning: from local to global and adaptive | Karin Schnass (Universität Innsbruck, Austria) |
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In this talk we first give relaxed conditions that guarantee one iteration of an alternating dictionary learning scheme to contract an estimate for the desired generating dictionary towards this generating dictionary. Conversely we will provide examples of dictionaries not equal to the generating dictionary that are stable fixed points of the alternating scheme. Based on these characterisations we then propose a (cheap) replacement strategy for alternate dictionary learning to avoid local minima. Finally we will discuss how the replacement strategy can be used to automatically determine the dictionary size and sparsity level. Karin Schnass holds an MSc in Mathematics from the University of Vienna (AT), 2004, and a PhD in Computer, Communication and Information Sciences from EPFL (CH), 2009. Following a postdoc at RICAM Linz (AT) and two maternity leaves, she spent 2 years as Schroedinger fellow at the University of Sassari (IT). Since 2015 she is assistant professor at the University of Innsbruck, where she is heading the FWF-START-project ‘Optimisation Principles, Models & Algorithms for Dictionary Learning' (up to 6 yrs, 1.2M€). She is an expert on (theoretical) dictionary learning. |
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11:30 | Oral Session 1 |
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12:15 | Lunch & Posters |
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13:45 | Oral Session 2 |
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15:00 | Coffee & Posters |
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15:30 | Keynote: A Compressed Sensing perspective on astronomical image acquisition and processing | Jean-Luc Starck (CEA-Saclay, France) |
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We will present how Compressed Sensing (CS) and sparse recovery idea impact the way astronomers process existing data set, or design new instruments. Interferometric images or gammay ray images acquired through coded masks are two typical examples where data can be interpreted through the CS perspective. We will then focus on the radio-astronomy case. We will present a new sparse recovery method for LOFAR and SKA, which allows to perform jointly a deconvolution and a blind source separation. Jean-Luc Starck is Director of Research and head of the CosmoStat laboratory at the Institute of Research into the Fundamental Laws of the Universe, Service d'Astrophysique, CEA-Saclay, France. Jean-Luc Starck has a Ph.D from Nice Observatory and an Habilitation from University Paris XI. He was a visitor at the European Southern Observatory in 1993, at UCLA in 2004 and at Stanford’s Department of Statistics in 2000 and 2005. Since 1994, he is a tenured researcher at CEA. He created in 2010 the CosmoStat laboratory and is strongly involved in the Euclid ESA space mission. He received the EADS prize of the French Academy of Science in 2011.
He leads Cosmostat, an interdisciplinary research group at the interface between cosmology and statistical methods with a focus on industry-academia partnership. He has organized 16 conferences, and was keynote, invited or seminar speaker over fifty times in the last five years. Over the last 10 years, he has been involved as Co-I or PI in the management of 8 million euros of grants from national, European and international sources, including a senior ERC. He has published over 200 refereed papers in astrophysics, cosmology, signal processing and applied mathematics, and he is also author of three books. |
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16:20 | Closing Remarks | Mark Plumbley (Uni. Surrey, UK) |
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16:30 | Discussions continue. |