Skip to main content

Preliminary programme open for European Machine Vision Forum

The second European Machine Vision Forum takes place in Vienna from 6-8 September 2017, with a focus on the next generation of vision systems for industry, such as new modes of image acquisition, new hardware platforms, and advanced algorithms in order to solve more complex tasks with less effort. The forum is hosted and sponsored by the AIT Austrian Institute for Technology and the Heidelberg Collaboratory for Image Processing. Aimed at scientists, development engineers, software and hardware engineers, an
May 5, 2017 Read time: 1 min
The second European Machine Vision Forum takes place in Vienna from 6-8 September 2017, with a focus on the next generation of vision systems for industry, such as new modes of image acquisition, new hardware platforms, and advanced algorithms in order to solve more complex tasks with less effort. The forum is hosted and sponsored by the AIT Austrian Institute for Technology and the Heidelberg Collaboratory for Image Processing.


Aimed at scientists, development engineers, software and hardware engineers, and programmers both from research and industry, it features plenary sessions with selected contributed and invited talks, a podium discussion, extended coffee and lunch breaks and evening sessions for networking, poster presentations as well as software demonstrations.

The preliminary program with invited talks is online and registration is open. Deadline for abstracts for contributed papers is 2 June and for posters, hardware and software demonstrations it is 11 August.

Related Content

  • Personal Rapid Transit, clear benefits for European cities
    July 26, 2012
    David Crawford watches the race to get the world's first PRT system up and running. To paraphrase the old joke about buses bunching, you seem to have to wait several decades for a Personal Rapid Transit (PRT) system, and then half a dozen come along together. Currently, in fact, there are well over that number of schemes for driverless electric passenger-carrying 'pod' networks at various stages of planning, design and implementation around the world. Locations range from a straight-off-the-drawing board ne
  • T-Tech24 New Zealand: call for abstracts
    February 29, 2024
    Potential presenters have until 11 March to get 250-word submissions to ITS New Zealand
  • Deadlines approach for Europe’s automatic crash alert system
    September 15, 2016
    The EU-co-funded I_ HeERO (Infrastructure_ Harmonised eCall European Pilot) project is working to ensure the readiness of national networks of call centres - known as public safety answering posts (PSAPs) - to deal with automated crash alerts arriving via the continent-wide 112 emergency phone number. Following on from its HeERO and HeERO2 pre-deployment predecessors, which enjoyed €16m (US$17.76m) in EU funding, the new initiative runs from 1 January 2015 to 31 December 2017. It has €30.9 million (US$34.
  • Is GIS modelling the answer to the implications of age?
    January 26, 2012
    Geoff Zeiss of Autodesk talks about the convergence going on between GIS and other software systems which will revolutionise the design and construction of nations' utilities. The issue is that we're getting old. But forget the discovery of body hair in places it never used to be, whether or not to dye, contact lenses versus glasses - in fact, put aside entirely the decision to age gracefully or outrageously; the personal implications pale next to the effects on wider society. Faced with the problem of how