Note: This list is no longer maintained and is several years out of date.

Publication List

Papers

  1. AER: Aesthetic Exploration and Refinement for Expressive Character Animation, Michael Neff and Eugene Fiume.  ACM SIGGRAPH/Eurographics Symposium on Computer Animation, 2005.        [animations]

  2. Methods for Exploring Expressive Stance, Michael Neff and Eugene Fiume.  Graphical Models, To Appear, 2005. [preprint the final corrected article is available from Science Direct]

  3. Predictive Feedback for Interactive Control of Physics-based Characters, Joe Laszlo, Michael Neff and Karan Singh.  Eurographics,  2005.[Check here for animations etc.]       

  4. Methods for Exploring Expressive Stance, Michael Neff and Eugene Fiume.  ACM SIGGRAPH/Eurographics Symposium on Computer Animation, pp. 49-58, 2004.        [animations]

  5. Artistically Based Computer Generation of Expressive Motion, Michael Neff and Eugene Fiume.  Proceedings of the AISB 2004 Symposium on Language, Speech and Gesture for Expressive Characters.  pp. 29-39, 2004.        [animations]

  6. Aesthetic Edits for Character Animation, Michael Neff and Eugene Fiume.  ACM SIGGRAPH/Eurographics Symposium on Computer Animation.  pp. 239-244, 2003.        [animations]

  7. Modeling Tension and Relaxation for Computer Animation,  Michael Neff and Eugene Fiume.  ACM SIGGRAPH Symposium on Computer Animation.  pp. 81-88, 2002.        [errata, more info and animations]

  8. A Visual Model For Blast Waves and Fracture,  Michael Neff and Eugene L. Fiume . Graphics Interface '99.  pp. 193-202, 1999.

Posters

  1. Modeling Ambient Lower Body Motion, Sageev Oore and Michael Neff.  ACM SIGGRAPH/Eurographics Symposium on Computer Animation Poster Session, 2004.

Theses

  1.  A Visual Model for Blast Waves and Fracture.  Michael Neff.  Master's Thesis, Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto, 1998. (Also available as a pdf.)
  2.  Aesthetic Exploration and Refinement: A Computational Framework for Expressive Character Animation .  Michael Neff.  Ph.D. Thesis, Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto, 2005. (Formatted for double-sided printing. Also available in single sided formatting by request.)