Associate Director, Faculty Affairs-SISTA | Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering | Professor, Computer Science | Professor, BIO5 Institute | Professor, Cognitive Science - GIDP | Member of the Graduate Faculty | Professor, Genetics - GIDP | Professor, Statistics-GIDP
Kobus Barnard, PhD, is an associate professor in the recently formed University of Arizona School of Information: Science, Technology, and Arts SISTA) created to foster computational approaches across disciplines in both research and education. He also has University of Arizona appointments with Computer Science, ECE, Statistics, Cognitive Sciences, and BIO5. He leads the Interdisciplinary Visual Intelligence Lab IVILAB) currently housed in SISTA. Research in the IVILAB revolves around building top-down statistical models that link theory and semantics to data. Such models support going from data to knowledge using Bayesian inference. Much of this work is in the context of inferring semantics and geometric form from image and video. For example, in collaboration with multiple researchers, the IVILAB has applied this approach to problems in computer vision e.g. tracking people in 3D from video, understanding 3D scenes from images, and learning models of object structure) and biological image understanding e.g. tracking pollen tubes growing in vitro, inferring the morphology of neurons grown in culture, extracting 3D structure of filamentous fungi from the genus Alternaria from brightfield microscopy image stacks, and extracting 3D structure of Arabidopsis plants) An additional IVILAB research project, Semantically Linked Instructional Content SLIC) is on improving access to educational video through searching and browsing.Dr. Barnard holds an NSF CAREER grant, and has received support from three additional NSF grants, the DARPA Mind’s eye program, ONR, the Arizona Biomedical Research Commission ABRC) and a BIO5 seed grant. He was supported by NSERC Canada) during graduate and post-graduate studies NSERC A, B and PDF) His work on computational color constancy was awarded the Governor General’s gold medal for the best dissertation across disciplines at SFU. He has published over 80 papers, including one awarded best paper on cognitive computer vision in 2002.