Plenary Speaker

Byoungho Lee, Seoul National Univ., South Korea
3D Display - Where We Are and Where to Go
Abstract: An overview of history and present state of three-dimensional display is given, covering technical and market aspects. Possible research directions that will be considered important in the future are also discussed.

George Smith
Recipient of 2009 Nobel Prize in Physics
The Invention and Early History of the CCD
Abstract: As the first practical solid state imaging device, the invention of the Charge Coupled Device has profoundly affected image sensing technology. They are used in a wide range of applications both as area and linear imaging devices starting with the replacement of imaging tubes used in commercial TV cameras and cam-corders. The rapid rise of their use in digital cameras has initiated the demise of film photography and created vast new markets with great economic benefit for many. Other uses include a wide variety of scientific, medical, surveillance and scanning applications. The inception of the device at Bell Labs by Willard S. Boyle and George E. Smith in 1969 was strongly influenced by several unique factors existing both within Bell Labs and the current world state of technology. These factors and their relevance will be discussed along with the train of thought leading to the invention. Early experimental devices and their initial applications were vigorously pursued and will be described. Mention of current applications will be given.
Tutorial Speakers
Digital Holographic Interferometry – Principles and Applications to Deformation Measurement,
Partha Banerjee,
Univ. of Dayton, USA
Tutorial: Title to be Announced,
Myung K. Kim,
Univ. of South Florida, USA
Invited Speakers
Digital Holography for the Life Sciences, Gert von Bally, Westfaelische Wilhelms Univ. Munster, Germany
Using Light Coherence and Wave Control in 3D Biomedical Imaging, Albert-Claude Boccara, Ecole Sup Physique Chimie Industrielles, France
Multiplex Holography for Walk-Around Viewing, Yih-Shyang Cheng, National Central Univ., China
Recent Progresses in Digital Holographic Microscopy with Spatial Partial Coherent Light and Applications, Frank Dubois, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
Enhanced Dynamic Holography in Organic-Inorganic Hybrid Devices, Dean Evans, US Air Force Research Laboratory, USA
Digital Holographic Interferometry and ESPI at Long Infrared Wavelengths with CO2 Lasers, Marc Georges, Univ. de Liege, Belgium
Adaptive LC-Lens Array for 3D Display and Capturing, Yi-Pai Huang, National Chiao Tung Univ., Taiwan
Optical Information Processing by Polarization-Holographic Elements, George Kakauridze, Institute of Cybernetics, Georgia
3D Tracking of the Brownian Motion of Polystyrene Beads with DHM, Dug Young Kim, Gwangju Inst. of Science and Technology, South Korea
Digital Holography of Cellular Motions in Live Tissue, David Nolte, Purdue Univ., USA
Cell Dynamics Studied by Quantitative Phase Imaging, Gabriel Popescu, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Analysis and Characterization of Digital Holographic Systems, John Sheridan, Univ. College Dublin, Ireland
Compressing Sensing Techniques for Holography: Theory and Examples, Adrian Stern, Ben Gurion Univ. of the Negev, Israel
3D Display Using Electronic Holography and 3D Data Acquisition Using 300-Camera Array, Kenji Yamamoto, NICT, Japan
Digital Holographic Three-Dimensional Imaging Spectrometry, Kyu Yoshimori, Iwate Univ., Japan
Analysis and Experimental Achievement of High Resolution Imaging in Digital Holography, Jianlin Zhao, Northwestern Polytechnical Univ., China