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Good morning Tux! A reminder that our first talk of the year will take place tomorrow at Autodesk Research’s new facility in the MaRS building, at the south-east corner of College and University. We look forward to hosting Prof. Maneesh Agrawala of Stanford
University. This is the only talk taking place on a Thursday this year, the rest of our talks will be on Tuesdays. See the
Tux website for the complete schedule. We look forward to seeing you there! Prof. Maneesh Agrawala: Storytelling Tools
Tomorrow at
Autodesk Research (MaRS Building), 12:30 lunch, 1:00 talk
Storytelling Tools
Storytelling is essential for communicating ideas. When they are well told, stories help us make sense of information, appreciate cultural or societal differences, and imagine living
in entirely different worlds. Audio/visual stories in the form of radio programs, books-on-tape, podcasts, television, movies and animations, are especially powerful because they provide a rich multisensory experience. Technological advances have made it easy
to capture stories using the microphones and cameras that are readily available in our mobile devices, But, the raw media rarely tells a compelling story. The best storytellers carefully compose, filter, edit and highlight the raw media to produce an engaging piece. Yet, the software tools they use to create and manipulate the raw audio/video
media (e.g. Pro Tools, Premiere, Final Cut Pro, Maya etc.) force storytellers to work at a tediously low-level – selecting, filtering, cutting and transitioning between audio/video frames. While these tools provide flexible and precise control over the look
and sound of the final result, they are notoriously difficult to learn and accessible primarily to experts. In this talk I’ll present recent projects that aim to significantly reduce the effort required to edit and produce high-quality audio/visual stories. About Prof. Agrawala
Maneesh Agrawala is the Forest Baskett Professor of Computer Science and
Director of the Brown Institute for Media Innovation at Stanford University. He works on computer graphics, human computer interaction and visualization.
His focus is on investigating how cognitive design principles can be used to improve the effectiveness of audio/visual media. The goals of this work are to discover the design principles and then instantiate them in both interactive and automated design tools.
He received an Okawa Foundation Research Grant (2006), an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship (2007), an NSF
CAREER Award (2007), a SIGGRAPH Significant New Researcher Award (2008), a MacArthur Foundation
Fellowship (2009), and an Allen Distinguished Investigator Award (2014) |
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OUR SPONSORS: Tux is made possible by the support of our sponsors, Steven Sanders, Autodesk,
University of Toronto Departments of Computer Science, and MaRS. About MaRS: MaRS is the one of the world’s largest urban innovation hubs—a place for collaboration, creativity and entrepreneurship. Located in the heart
of Toronto’s research district, MaRS provides the space, training, talent and networks required to commercialize important discoveries and launch and grow Canadian startups. |