Harry Wechsler

 Biosketch

 New Book: Reliable Face Recognition Methods

 Center for Distributed and Intelligent Computation

 Teaching

 CFP: Submission Deadline: Dec. 1, 2007
IJPRAI Special Issue on Facial Image Processing and Analysis

Address:
Department of Computer Science - MS 5A4
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
Office: 461 ST II
Email: wechsler@cs.gmu.edu
Phone: +1 (703) 993 1533
Fax: +1 (703) 993 1710
 

Harry Wechsler received the PhD degree in computer science from the University of California, Irvine, in 1975. Currently, he is a Professor of computer science and Director for the Center of Distributed and Intelligent Computation at George Mason University (GMU). His research in the field of intelligent systems focuses on computational vision, image and signal processing, data mining, machine learning and pattern recognition, with applications for ATR, biometrics/face recognition, intelligent HCI, performance evaluation, temporal data mining, and video processing and surveillance. He has published more than 200 scientific papers, serves on the editorial board for major scientific publications (among them IEEE Trans. on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, IEEE Trans. on Neural Networks, Compute Vision and Image Understanding) and is the author of Computational Vision (Academic Press, 1990). As a leading researcher in face recognition, he organized and directed the NATO Advanced Study Institute (ASI) on “Face Recognition: From Theory to Applications” (Stirling, UK, 1997), whose seminal proceedings were published by Springer (1998). His book on “Reliable Face Recognition Methods,” which breaks new ground in biometrics and applied modern pattern recognition, will be forthcoming from Springer in the summer of 2006. Dr. Wechsler directed at GMU the development of FERET, which has become the standard facial data base for benchmark studies and experimentation. He was elected an IEEE Fellow in 1992 for “contributions to spatial/spectral image representations and neural networks and their theoretical integration and application to human and machine perception.” He was also elected as an IAPR (International Association of Pattern Recognition) Fellow in 1998. He received from the School of Information Technology and Engineering (IT&E) / GMU the Research Excellence Award in 2003. He was granted (together with his former doctoral students) two patents by USPO in 2004 on fractal image compression using quad-Q-learning and feature based classification (for face recognition). A third patent on open set recognition has been filed with USPO in 2004.


Department of Computer Science

George Mason University