Google releases 2020 academic indicators; CVPR rank first among AI academic conferences
Google officially released the 2020 Scholar Metrics list.
AI Technology & Industry Review
Google officially released the 2020 Scholar Metrics list.
As part of our year-end series, Synced spotlights 10 artificial intelligence papers that garnered extraordinary attention and accolades in 2019.
Estimates peg the total number of academic papers and other scholarly literature indexed on the Google Scholar at almost 400 million, making it the world’s largest such database.
The Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) announced this week they have accepted 1300 research papers for CVPR 2019, which will be held June 16 – 20 in Long Beach, California. This year’s submission and acceptance totals both set records for the world’s premier computer vision conference, which had never before accepted more than 1000 papers.
NVIDIA researchers have developed a deep learning-based system which can produce high-quality slow-motion video from a standard (30 fps) video clip. In comparison with manual slow motion results, the NVIDIA demonstration video shows far superior smoothness.
Peer review is an essential process that subjects new research to the scrutiny of other experts in the same field. Today’s top Machine Learning (ML) conferences are heavily reliant on peer review as it allows them to gauge submitted academic papers’ quality and suitability.
CVPR 2017 conference covered topics in: Machine Learning, Object Recognition & Scene Understanding – Computer Vision & Language, 3D Vision, Human Analyzing, Low- & Mid- Level Vision, Image Motion & Tracking: Video Analysis, Computational Photography, Applications.
Hosted annually in the United States, the Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Conference received 2,620 submissions, accepted 783 papers, attracted 127 sponsors with $859,000 in sponsorship and close to 5,000 attendees.