Thomas Tsao, PhD Thomas has worked on the problem of computer vision for the last 30 years. Prior to founding OpticArray Technologies, he founded CompuSensor Technology Corporation, which did R&D on intelligent autonomous systems and sensor information extraction for numerous government agencies and companies including Sandia National Laboratories, the Department of Defense, Boeing, and Lockheed Martin. He has published numerous papers on computer vision and received the SPIE Kingslake Medal and Prize for his work on target tracking through rapid sensor orientation change. He earned his PhD in the Machine Intelligence and Pattern Analysis Laboratory at University of Maryland. |
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Xuemei Cheng, PhD Xuemei was previously chief engineer at CompuSensor Tech Corp., where she developed computer vision and image processing algorithms for various object-detection and tracking projects. Prior to that, she worked as a circuit design engineer for FiberHome Technologies Group in China. She earned her MS in EE from Wuhan University and her PhD in Bioengineering from University of Maryland, working on hyperspectral imaging and patter analysis technology. |
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Tianlong Chen Tianlong previously was co-founder and CTO of InteliTrac Inc., where he developed InteliTrac's innovative Biometric Database, which was the first of its kind to provide fast search in un-structured biometric data such as face, fingerprint and iris templates. Prior to that he was cofounder and VP of engineering at BroadbandMD which provided on-demand content delivery platform. He earned his MS in both Physics and CS from University of Utah. |
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Albert Tsao, PhD Albert is a fellow of the Helen Hay Whitney Foundation, and is currently exploring how our brains generate new ideas. Albert earned his PhD in Neuroscience at the Norwegian University of Technology in Science under Edvard and May-Britt Moser where he worked on the neural mechanisms of memory and spatial navigation. |
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Doris Tsao, PhD Doris is a Professor of Biology at Caltech and Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Her lab studies the neural mechanisms underlying primate vision, particularly how visual objects are represented in the brain and how these representations are used to guide behavior. She is widely recognized for the discovery and elucidation of the macaque face patch system, a network of brain regions that are dedicated to face processing. She is the recipient of multiple honors including the NIH Pioneer Award, Technology Review TR35, and the Minerva Foundation Golden Brain Award. |
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Contact us at: info@OpticArrayTech.com |