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Gary Bishop

Researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Publications -  74
Citations -  11415

Gary Bishop is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rendering (computer graphics) & Image warping. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 74 publications receiving 11070 citations. Previous affiliations of Gary Bishop include Research Triangle Park & BAE Systems.

Papers
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BookDOI

An Introduction to the Kalman Filter

TL;DR: The discrete Kalman filter as mentioned in this paper is a set of mathematical equations that provides an efficient computational (recursive) means to estimate the state of a process, in a way that minimizes the mean of the squared error.

An Introduction to the Kalman Filter

Greg Welch, +1 more
TL;DR: The discrete Kalman filter as mentioned in this paper is a set of mathematical equations that provides an efficient computational (recursive) means to estimate the state of a process, in a way that minimizes the mean of the squared error.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Plenoptic modeling: an image-based rendering system

TL;DR: An image-based rendering system based on sampling, reconstructing, and resampling the plenoptic function is presented and a novel visible surface algorithm and a geometric invariant for cylindrical projections that is equivalent to the epipolar constraint defined for planar projections are introduced.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Post-rendering 3D warping

TL;DR: This paper uses McMillan and Bishop’s image warping algorithm to re-render, allowing it to compensate for viewpoint translation as well as rotation, and avoids occlusion-related artifacts by warping two different reference images and compositing the results.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Improving static and dynamic registration in an optical see-through HMD

TL;DR: This paper offers improved registration in two areas: accurate static registration across a wide variety of viewing angles and positions and dynamic errors that occur when the user moves his head are reduced by predicting future head locations.