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Staff

Dimitris Metaxas

Computation/Imaging
Rutgers University


Dr. Dimitris Metaxas is a Professor in the Division of Computer and Information Sciences and Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Rutgers University since September 2001. He is directing the Center for Computational Biomedicine, Imaging and Modeling (CBIM). From January 1998 to September 2001 he was a tenured Associate Professor in the Computer and Information Science Department of the University of Pennsylvania and Director of the VAST Lab. Prior to this he was an
Assistant Professor in the same department since 1992. Prof. Metaxas received a Diploma in Electrical Engineering with highest honors from the
National Technical University of Athens Greece in 1986, an M.Sc. in Computer Science from the University of Maryland, College Park in 1988, and a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada in 1992.

Dr. Metaxas has been conducting research towards the development of formal methods upon which both computer vision, computer graphics and medical imaging can advance synergistically. In computer vision, he works on the simultaneous segmentation and fitting of complex objects, shape representation, deterministic and statistical object tracking and gesture recognition. Over the past 6 years he has been working on dymamic data driven applications for human surveillance, security and ASL Recognition. In the area of biomedical applications he has developed innovative methods for material modeling and shape estimation of internal body parts (e.g.,
lungs) from MRI, SPAMM and CT data, a framework for linking the anatomical and physiological models of the human body and deformable models suitable for the automatic diagnosis of heart illness from MRI data. In computer graphics, new techniques have been developed for
modeling fluid phenomena, deformable models and control theoretic and kinematic techniques for automating and improving the animation of articulated (e.g., humans) objects. Dr. Metaxas has published over 180 research articles in these areas and has graduated 18 PhD students. The above research has been, and is currently being funded by NSF, NIH, ONR, AFOSR, DARPA and the ARO.

Dr. Metaxas has published a book on his research activities titled "Physics-based deformable models: Applications to computer vision, graphics and medical imaging" which was published by Kluwer Academic.
He organized the first IEEE Workshop on Physics-Based Modeling in Computer Vision, he is on the Editorial Board of MedIA, as Associate Editor of GMIP, and is a Co-Editor of and has been an editor for several special issues in the area of physics-based modeling. Dr. Metaxas has received five best paper awards for his work on computer vision and medical image analysis and has several related patents. He was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship in 1986, is a recipient of an NSF Research Initiation and Career awards, an ONR YIP, and is a Fellow of
the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineers, and a member
of ACM and IEEE.

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The is material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grant number SBE-0541953. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.