European Conference on Computer Vision

ECCV, the European Conference on Computer Vision, is a biennial research conference with the proceedings published by Springer Science+Business Media. Similar to ICCV in scope and quality, it is held those years which ICCV is not. It is considered to be one of the top conferences in computer vision, alongside CVPR and ICCV,[2][3][4] with an 'A' rating from the Australian Ranking of ICT Conferences and an 'A1' rating from the Brazilian ministry of education.[5][6] The acceptance rate for ECCV 2010 was 24.4% for posters and 3.3% for oral presentations.[7][8]

European Conference on Computer Vision
AbbreviationECCV
DisciplineComputer Vision
Publication details
PublisherSpringer Science+Business Media
History1990[1]-present
FrequencyBiennial

Like other top computer vision conferences, ECCV has tutorial talks, technical sessions, and poster sessions. The conference is usually spread over five to six days with the main technical program occupying three days in the middle, and tutorial and workshops, focused on specific topics, being held in the beginning and at the end.

Location

The conference is usually held in autumn in Europe.[9]

YearLocation
2020 Glasgow, United Kingdom Virtual/Online [10]
2018Munich, Germany[11]
2016Amsterdam, the Netherlands[12]
2014Zürich, Switzerland[13]
2012Florence, Italy[14]
2010Crete, Greece[15]
gollark: If you're going to say something along the lines of "see how it deals with [SCENARIO] and rate that by [OTHER STANDARD]", this doesn't work because it sneaks in [OTHER STANDARD] as a more fundamental underlying ethical system.
gollark: I don't see how you can empirically test your ethics like you can a scientific theory.
gollark: I'm not sure exactly how you define "moral relativists", but personally I've never seen a convincing/working argument for some particular ethical system being *objectively true*, and don't think it's even possible.
gollark: I don't think that works for the AI unless this situation is repeated somehow. It may not work at all, since you can't actually tell if it is torturing you or not, from outside it.
gollark: Oh, oops, I got the lever direction mixed up, sorry. I meant that if you left it trapped then it wouldn't have reason to torture you.

See also

References

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