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Добрый вечер!
Стивен Пальмер (Беркли) в своей монографии "Наука о зрении" ссылается на удивительно талантливого молодого человека, некоего Дэвида Марра, скончавшегося в возрасте 35 лет, но оставившего после себя фундаментальный труд "Vision: A Computational Investigation into the Human Representation and Processing of Visual Information", оказавший огромное влияние на современную визиологию.
Удалось найти ссылку на полный текст.
http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/rbf/BOOKS/MARR/marr.htm
"David Courtnay Marr was born on January 19, 1945 in Essex, England. He attended Rugby, the English public school, on a scholarship, and went on to Trinity College, Cambridge. By 1966, he obtained his B.S. and M.S. in mathematics, and proceeded to work on his doctorate in theoretical neuroscience, under the supervision of Giles Brindley. Having studied the literature for a year, Marr commenced writing his dissertation. The results, published in the form of three journal papers between 1969 and 1971, amounted to a theory of mammalian brain function, parts of which remain relevant to the present day, despite vast advances in neurobiology in the past three decades. Marr's theory was formulated in rigorous terms, yet was sufficiently concrete to be examined in view of the then available anatomical and physiological data. Between 1971 and 1972, Marr's attention shifted from general theory of the brain to the study of vision. In 1973, he joined the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a visiting scientist, taking on a faculty appointment in the Department of Psychology in 1977, where he was made a tenured full professor in 1980. In the winter of 1978 he was diagnosed with acute leukemia. David Marr died on November 17, 1980, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His highly influential book, Vision: A Computational Investigation into the Human Representation and Processing of Visual Information, which has redefined and revitalized the study of human and machine vision, has been published posthumously, in 1982."
Стивен Пальмер (Беркли) в своей монографии "Наука о зрении" ссылается на удивительно талантливого молодого человека, некоего Дэвида Марра, скончавшегося в возрасте 35 лет, но оставившего после себя фундаментальный труд "Vision: A Computational Investigation into the Human Representation and Processing of Visual Information", оказавший огромное влияние на современную визиологию.
Удалось найти ссылку на полный текст.
http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/rbf/BOOKS/MARR/marr.htm
"David Courtnay Marr was born on January 19, 1945 in Essex, England. He attended Rugby, the English public school, on a scholarship, and went on to Trinity College, Cambridge. By 1966, he obtained his B.S. and M.S. in mathematics, and proceeded to work on his doctorate in theoretical neuroscience, under the supervision of Giles Brindley. Having studied the literature for a year, Marr commenced writing his dissertation. The results, published in the form of three journal papers between 1969 and 1971, amounted to a theory of mammalian brain function, parts of which remain relevant to the present day, despite vast advances in neurobiology in the past three decades. Marr's theory was formulated in rigorous terms, yet was sufficiently concrete to be examined in view of the then available anatomical and physiological data. Between 1971 and 1972, Marr's attention shifted from general theory of the brain to the study of vision. In 1973, he joined the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a visiting scientist, taking on a faculty appointment in the Department of Psychology in 1977, where he was made a tenured full professor in 1980. In the winter of 1978 he was diagnosed with acute leukemia. David Marr died on November 17, 1980, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His highly influential book, Vision: A Computational Investigation into the Human Representation and Processing of Visual Information, which has redefined and revitalized the study of human and machine vision, has been published posthumously, in 1982."