Alain Fournier

Alain Fournier (1943–2000) was a computer graphics researcher.

Biography

Alain Fournier was born on November 5, 1943, in Lyon, France. He was married twice, first to Beverly Bickle (married 1968, divorced 1984) and later to Adrienne Drobnies, with whom he had one daughter, Ariel.

Fournier's early training was in chemistry, culminating in a B.Sc. from INSA, France in 1965. After emigrating from France to Montreal, Quebec, Canada in the 1970s, he co-wrote a textbook on chemistry, and taught the subject in Quebec. His career in computer graphics spanned only about 20 years. In 1980 he received a Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Texas at Dallas under the supervision of Zvi Meir Kedem, and with Donald Fussell and Loren Carpenter reported the results of his Ph.D. work on stochastic modelling in a seminal paper in 1980. He then went on to an outstanding academic career, first at the University of Toronto as part of the Dynamic Graphics Project and subsequently at the University of British Columbia. He has contributed to ACM Transactions on Graphics as an author, as co-guest editor of a special issue in 1987, and, from 1990 to 1992, as an associate editor.

Fournier made contributions to computer graphics dealing with modelling of natural phenomena. He advocated a methodology that required validation against real visual phenomena. He once called his approach impressionistic graphics and it both revolutionized the field and drove it forward. An example is his beautiful paper (with Bill Reeves) on the depiction of ocean waves. His subsequent work dealt with illumination models, light transport, rendering, and sampling and filtering.

Fournier died of lymphoma in the early hours of August 14, 2000, in Vancouver.

The SIGGRAPH 2001 Proceedings were dedicated to Fournier.

The first Alain Fournier Award for the best Canadian doctoral dissertation in computer graphics was awarded to Michael P. Neff on June 8, 2006, at the Graphics Interface 2006 conference in Quebec City.

Publications

Fournier published 32 scholarly papers about computer graphics.

Bibliography for Alain Fournier

Photo

gollark: Obviously, with all those extra dimensions, they're a string theorist.
gollark: Here is a meme. There will be no more memes until a later time.
gollark: I mean, technically you're all just being simulated on my laptop, for purposes.
gollark: A randomly generated brain could randomly have that as one of its memories.
gollark: I'm aware of the concept. However:- why are you randomly adding spatial dimensions- "god" has a lot of connotations. If it can't actually do anything to things, it is not very god.> Didn’t they say that all the galaxies in the universe are connected in a similar way to neurons in a Brain?They're arranged in a vaguely webby structure IIRC.
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