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Bennett Wilburn

Researcher at Microsoft

Publications -  35
Citations -  4471

Bennett Wilburn is an academic researcher from Microsoft. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pixel & Image processing. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 35 publications receiving 4283 citations. Previous affiliations of Bennett Wilburn include Stanford University & Sony Broadcast & Professional Research Laboratories.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

High performance imaging using large camera arrays

TL;DR: A unique array of 100 custom video cameras that are built are described, and their experiences using this array in a range of imaging applications are summarized.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Using plane + parallax for calibrating dense camera arrays

TL;DR: A simple procedure to calibrate camera arrays used to capture light fields using a plane + parallax framework is described and it is shown how to estimate camera positions up to an affine ambiguity, and how to reproject light field images onto a family of planes using only knowledge of planarParallax for one point in the scene.
ReportDOI

The Light Field Video Camera

TL;DR: The Light Field Video Camera as mentioned in this paper is a modular embedded design based on the 1EEE1394 High Speed Serial Bus, with an image sensor and MPEG2 compression at each node.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

High-speed videography using a dense camera array

TL;DR: A system for capturing multi-thousand frame-per-second video using a dense array of cheap 30 fps CMOS image sensors and how to compensate for spatial and temporal distortions caused by the electronic rolling shutter, a common feature of low-end CMOS sensors is demonstrated.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Synthetic Aperture Focusing using a Shear-Warp Factorization of the Viewing Transform

TL;DR: This paper characterize the warps required for tilted focal planes and arbitrary camera configurations using a new rank- 1 constraint that lets us focus on any plane, without having to perform a metric calibration of the cameras, and shows that there are camera configurations and families of tilted focal aircraft that can be factorized into an initial homography followed by shifts.