Amy Ashurst Gooch

Amy Ashurst Gooch is a computer scientist known for her contributions in non-photorealistic rendering. She is currently the Chief Operations Officer at ViSUS LLC, a data visualization research spin-off software company from the Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute.[1] She is also an adjunct professor of computer science at Texas A&M University.[2] Her current research is part of an interdisciplinary effort involving computer graphics, perceptual psychology, and computational vision. She is interested in better understanding the spatial information potentially available in CG imagery, determining what spatial cues are actually used when CG imagery is viewed, and using this information to create improved rendering algorithms and visualizations.[3][4]

Amy Gooch
Alma materUniversity of Utah
Northwestern University
Known forGooch shading
Spouse(s)Bruce Gooch
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
InstitutionsScientific Computing and Imaging Institute
University of Victoria
Texas A&M
ThesisPreserving Salience By Maintaining Perceptual Differences for Image Creation and Manipulation (2006)
Doctoral advisorJack Tumblin

Biography

Gooch earned her BS in Computer Engineering in 1996 and her MS in Computer Science in 1998 from the University of Utah. While working on her master's degree, she explored interactive non-photorealistic technical illustration as a new rendering paradigm and developed Gooch shading, which she presented at the 1998 SIGGRAPH conference.[5][6] Following her masters, she worked at the University of Utah as a research scientist for five years.[7] During this time, she co-taught a course at the 1999 SIGGRAPH conference on non-photorealistic rendering and co-authored the first textbook in the field, Non-Photorealistic Rendering, with her husband Bruce Gooch.[8] In 2004, she began her PhD in computer science at Northwestern University and graduated in 2006.[9] Following her PhD, she joined the faculty at the University of Victoria in British Columbia as an assistant professor of computer science. In 2013, she joined the Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute to help develop the ViSUS software core into a product.[7] In 2014, she became an adjunct professor of computer science at Texas A&M University.[2]

Works

  • Bruce Gooch, Amy Ashurst Gooch, Non-Photorealistic Rendering, AK Peters, July 2001, ISBN 978-1-56881-133-8
gollark: Is that a "well okay but that sounds pointless" eh or a "what?" eh?
gollark: Well, if `debug` provides some information - start/end lines and file, I think - you can do it even *more* hackily and try to load load the relevant lines of the relevant file. Or you can patch `load` to do that somehow.
gollark: Oh, right, OC.
gollark: Functions seem to effectively consist of their code/source (you can get this, sort of, via `string.dump` and maybe `debug`), upvalues (`debug.getupvalue`), environment (`getfenv`?), and random metadata (name, file it's from, whatever else - `debug` can get this, don't know about setting it), so you can kind of swap them with lots of work.
gollark: Functions can probably be swapped, *extremely* hackily via insane debug abuse.

See also

References

  1. Marshall, Patrick (May 1, 2017). "Gigapixel image analysis on the fly". GCN. Retrieved May 13, 2017.
  2. "CSE announces exceptional new faculty". Texas A&M Engineering Communications. November 14, 2016. Archived from the original on August 14, 2017. Retrieved May 13, 2017.
  3. "Microsoft Research – Emerging Technology, Computer, and Software Research". Microsoft Research.
  4. http://portal2.acm.org/author_page.cfm?id=81100057321%5B%5D
  5. "A Non-Photorealistic Lighting Model For Automatic Technical Illustration". Northwestern University Computer Science.
  6. Porcino, Nick (November 10, 2007). "Siggraph 1998". nickporcino.com. Retrieved May 13, 2017.
  7. "People". SCI Institute. University of Utah. Retrieved May 13, 2017.
  8. "SIGGRAPH 99 Full Day Course: Non-PhotorealisticRendering". www.mrl.nyu.edu. New York University. Retrieved May 13, 2017.
  9. "Amy Ashurst Gooch - Vita" (PDF). Northwestern University. Retrieved May 13, 2017.
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