Computer Graphics and Visualization Fellowship
at UMBC
Graphics, Animation, and Visualization Lab
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department
University of Maryland Baltimore County
1000 Hilltop Circle
Baltimore, MD 21250
(410) 455-3500
The following fellowships and assistantships in
Computer Graphics and Visualization
are currently offered by Dr. David Ebert:
- One Graduate Fellowship position for 1997-98 academic year.
- One Graduate Fellowship position for 1998-99 academic year.
- Several Research Assistant and Teaching Assistant
positions possible to qualified students.
Students meeting the following qualifications are eligible:
- Experience and strong interest in computer graphics and visualization.
- Three letters of recommendation.
- M.S. (preferred) or B.S. degree in Computer Science or related field with
a GPA of 3.5 or greater on a 4.0 scale.
- Admission to the CSEE graduate program, including GRE
(and TOEFL for foreign students) scores.
Dr. David Ebert is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science
and Electrical Engineering at the University of Maryland Baltimore
County. He received his Ph.D. in Computer and Information Science in
June, 1991 from
The Ohio State University.
His current research interests include realistic volumetric visualization
(scientific, medical, information), rendering and animating gases and fluids,
realistic rendering, procedural graphics, and animation. Ebert has
written numerous journal articles, book chapters, and conference
papers on visualization and computer graphics, produced several
international award winning computer animations and images, taught
courses at five ACM SIGGRAPH conferences, and edited and co-authored
the book
``
Texturing and Modeling: A Procedural Approach''
for AP Professional.
For further information contact:
Dr. David Ebert,
Assistant Professor
Graphics, Animation, and Visualization Lab
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department
University of Maryland Baltimore County
1000 Hilltop Circle
Baltimore, MD 21250
Phone: (410) 455-3541
Email:
ebert@cs.umbc.edu
Application material is available either via the department's
on-line
pre-application form, or directly from the
graduate school.
The Visualization Group
The Visualization Group in the
Graphics, Animation, and Visualization Lab
(GAVL) is part of the
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department
(CS
EE)
at University of Maryland Baltimore County
(UMBC).
The group studies two focus areas:
information visualization
with emphasis on perception-based, two-handed,
minimally-immersive interaction techniques; and,
realistic volumetric visualization
and rendering using advanced modeling techniques.
Group Members
-
Dr. David Ebert Group Leader.
Assistant Professor,
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department, UMBC.
-
Dr. Chris Shaw Researcher.
Assistant Professor,
Department of Computer Science, University of Regina.
-
Amen Zwa Research Assistant.
Graduate Student,
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department, UMBC.
-
Linglan Zhang Research Assistant.
Graduate Student,
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department, UMBC.
-
Jim Kukla.
Student,
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department, UMBC.
-
Ted Bedwell.
Student,
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department, UMBC.
CSEE Department
The Department of
Computer Science and
Electrical Engineering
at UMBC
offers B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees. Its programs provide opportunities for
studies in all important areas of computer science and electrical engineering,
with emphases in telecommunications and computer networking,
computer graphics and interface technology, computability and algorithms,
computer architecture and VLSI, programming languages, software engineering,
artificial intelligence and machine learning, symbolic and numerical
computation, digital signal processing, optical communication, and
image processing. The department currently has 25 full time faculty
and 30 part-time adjunct faculty. There are approximately 700
undergraduate Computer Science majors and about 360 CSEE graduate
students. The department currently has grants from a number of
government agencies including NASA, ARPA, AFOSR, NIST, and NSF.
The departmental research facilities are focused in several laboratories
and offices, and consist of 2 SGI ONYX RealityEngine2 workstations,
5 SGI Indigo2 Extreme workstations, 50 SGI Indy workstations,
15 SPARCstation 10 workstations, 6 DECstation 5000 workstations,
and 25 Sun 3/60 workstations.
The department also maintains compute servers:
an SGI Power Challange with 208 MB of memory,
an SGI Crimson with 208 MB of memory, and
two Sun SPARCservers with 128M of memory each.
It also operates a number of PowerPC Macs and Pentium PCs.
The College of Engineering operates a Cray YMP-EL with 2 processors,
256 MB memory, and 4 GB disk space.
The Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department is affiliated with
the University of Maryland Institute for Advanced Computer Studies
(UMIACS)
which maintains a CM-5 with 32 processors which is available to support
research projects.
Imaging Research Center
The Imaging Research Center (IRC)
has both a research and a service component. The IRC has a number of
affiliated faculty, staff and students drawn primarily from the
departments of Visual Arts and Computer Science who conduct research
in computer graphics, visualization, digital imaging and multi-media
technology. The IRC also has a dedicated staff which provides the
campus with high-quality technical graphics services. The center
maintains two SGI ONYX workstations with high performance Reality
Engine graphics, supported by a miscellany of workstations and PCs.
Video I/O is provided via two video frame buffers (VideoLab and Avinzar)
driving an automated network of video devices, including SVHS, 8mm,
BetaCam, and digital disk. The center also offers several film
recorders, scanners and print devices, and high quality dye
sublimation printers.
University Computing Services
The general computational facilities for education and research are operated by
University Computing Services
(UCS)
These include
four SGI Crimsons, and three DECstation 5000s, one VAX 4000 Model 500, and
a large number of SGI workstations, Mac, and PCs.
Several new laboratories have opened recently which provide over
300 SGI workstations for general educational use.
These workstations feature the complete line of Indigo graphics,
including entry level (8-bit), Elan (24-bit accelerated),
Indy multimedia workstations, and Indigo2 Extreme workstations.
These are arranged in a number of laboratory groups which can be utilized
for hands on teaching.
The SGI Challenge-XL--a symmetric multiprocessing system with
20 R4400 processors, 1 GB of shared memory, and 10 GB of user disk space--
provides an excellent system for exploring shared memory multiprocessing,
distributed computing, and course to medium grain parallelism.
Amen Zwa
(zwa@cs.umbc.edu)
Last modified: 21 November 1996