For 2011 we have assembled a team of expert reviewers who will consider applications for presentations, and who will steer the content and ensure only the highest calibre of presentations form the final programme.
We are proud to announce the following experts in the field of image sensor technology are on the 2011 ISE Programme Committee.
To submit a paper proposal, please email a 50-100 word abstract and speaker profile to the Conference Director, Robert Stead.
Closing date for applications is: 31st August 2010
Lindsay has played a key role in the introduction and development of CMOS Image Sensor process technology inside ST where he is currently the Imaging Process Development Manager.
Lindsay Grant received the B.Sc. in Physics from St.Andrews University in 1984. After university he worked on plasma etch processing and BiCMOS process development. He then spent 11 years with Seagate Microelectronics working on Bipolar, CMOS, DMOS and BiCMOS technologies. In 1999 he joined ST Microelectronics, Edinburgh. He has played a key role in the introduction and development of CMOS Image Sensor process technology inside ST where he is currently the Imaging Process Development Manager.
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Jan Bosiers has been R&D Director of DALSA Professional Imaging, managing the CCD and CMOS imager R&D programs since the Philips professional CCD business was acquired by DALSA in 2002.
Jan Bosiers graduated as Electronic Engineer from the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium, in 1980. He did research on CCD imagers at the University of Leuven and later at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) in Washington, D.C. In 1986 he joined Philips in Eindhoven, the Netherlands. Since 2002, when the Philips professional CCD business was acquired by DALSA, he has been R&D Director of DALSA Professional Imaging, managing the CCD and CMOS imager R&D programs.
Richard Salmon, a Senior Research Engineer at BBC R&D, is a Cambridge Engineering graduate. Chairman of EBU project group P/Display, he is active in the Digital TV Group, and is a member of the Society for Information Display, the SMPTE and the IET.
Richard Salmon, a Senior Research Engineer at BBC R&D, is a Cambridge Engineering graduate. He recently pioneered work on high-frame-rate video, leading to well-received demonstrations and technical papers at the International Broadcasting Convention in Amsterdam, the Hollywood Post Alliance Technology Retreat and the EBU in Geneva. Chairman of EBU project group P/Display, he is active in the Digital TV Group, and is a member of the Society for Information Display, the SMPTE and the IET.
Karen O. Egiazarian (Eguiazarian) is a leading scientist in signal, image, and video processing, with about 500 refereed journal and conference articles, books and patents.
Karen O. Egiazarian (Eguiazarian) received the Ph.D. degree from Moscow M. V. Lomonosov State University, Russia, in 1986, and Doctor of Technology degree from Tampere University of Technology, Finland, in 1994. He is a leading scientist in signal, image, and video processing, with about 500 refereed journal and conference articles, books and patents. His main interests are in the field of image restoration, multirate signal processing, efficient algorithms, image compression, and digital logic. He is an Associate Editor of SPIE Journal of Electronic Imaging, an Associate Editor of Research Letters in Signal Processing, and a Member of the DSP Technical Committee of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society. He is a senior member of the IEEE.
Nigel M Allinson holds the Chair of Image Engineering at the University of Sheffield, where he leads the Vision and Information Group. Nigel has over thirty years experience in many aspects of imaging from image acquisition to image understanding.
Nigel M Allinson holds the Chair of Image Engineering at the University of Sheffield, where he leads the Vision and Information Group. Nigel has over thirty years experience in many aspects of imaging from image acquisition to image understanding. He led the £4.5m UK Basic Technology Consortium on developing active pixel sensors for scientific and medical applications as well as the follow-on project on realising wafer-scale imagers for clinical imaging. He has published over 270 scientific papers, is a member of scientific advisory committees at world-leading research facilities, and has advised Government on forensic and biometric imaging. He has co-founded three spinout companies - one of which producing leading analytical instruments using active pixel sensors.
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