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Bio (longer)
Paul Debevec is a
research associate professor at the University of Southern California
and the associate director of graphics research at USC's Institute for
Creative Technologies. Debevec's Ph.D. thesis (UC Berkeley,
1996) presented Façade, an
image-based modeling and rendering system for creating photoreal
architectural models from photographs. Using Facade he led the
creation of virtual cinematography of the Berkeley campus for his 1997
film The Campanile
Movie whose techniques were used to create virtual backgrounds
in the 1999 film The
Matrix. Subsequently, Debevec developed techniques for
illuminating computer-generated scenes with real-world lighting captured
through high dynamic range photography,
demonstrating new image-based lighting
techniques in his films Rendering with Natural
Light (1998), Fiat Lux (1999), and
The Parthenon
(2004); he also led the design of HDR Shop, the first high dynamic
range image editing program. At USC ICT, Debevec has led the
development of a series of Light Stage devices for
capturing and simulating how objects and people reflect light,
recently used to create realistic digital actors in films such as Spider
Man 2 and Superman
Returns. He is the recipient of ACM SIGGRAPH's first Significant New Researcher Award and a co-author
of the 2005 book High
Dynamic Range Imaging from Morgan Kaufmann.
www.debevec.org
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