John K. Tsotsos

John Tsotsos is Distinguished Research Professor of Vision Science at York University and hold the Canada Research Chair in Computational Vision. He received York’s Inaugural President’s Research Excellence Award, is also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, has been a Fellow of the Canadian Institute of Advanced Research and received several other awards. Born in Windsor, Ontario, he holds a doctoral degree from Computer Science at the University of Toronto where he is cross-appointed in Computer Science and Ophthalmology and Vision Sciences. His research spans computer science, psychology and neuroscience and is focused on visual attention and visual object recognition in both man and robots as well as mobile robotics and assistive technology.

Publications

Foreword
John K. Tsotsos. © 2013. 3 pages.
This Foreword is included in the book Developing and Applying Biologically-Inspired Vision Systems: Interdisciplinary Concepts.
Attention in Stereo Vision: Implications for Computational Models of Attention
Neil D. B. Bruce, John K. Tsotsos. © 2013. 24 pages.
The stereo correspondence problem is a topic that has been the subject of considerable research effort. What has not yet been considered is an analogue of stereo correspondence...
The Roles of Endstopped and Curvature Tuned Computations in a Hierarchical Representation of 2D Shape
Antonio J. Rodríguez-Sánchez, John K. Tsotsos. © 2013. 24 pages.
Computational models of visual processes are of interest in fields such as cybernetics, robotics, computer vision, and others. This chapter argues for the importance of...
The Roles of Endstopped and Curvature Tuned Computations in a Hierarchical Representation of 2D Shape
Antonio J. Rodríguez-Sánchez, John K. Tsotsos. © 2013. 23 pages.
Computational models of visual processes are of interest in fields such as cybernetics, robotics, computer vision, and others. This chapter argues for the importance of...