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start [2020/07/24 11:36] awfstart [2023/07/26 11:45] (current) awf
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-I am a researcher at Microsoft in CambridgeUK, where I work on machine learning, computer vision, and programming languages.+Andrew Fitzgibbon is an Engineering Fellow at Graphcoreworking on the future of computing hardware and programming for AI and numerical computing.
  
-I have more formal homepage at http://aka.ms/awfthis site a personal homepagecontaining various mutterings too unpolished to even consider as blog posts.+He is best known for his work on computer vision: he was core contributor to the Emmy-award-winning 3D camera tracker “boujou”, having co-founded the company "2d3", with Andrew Zisserman, Julian Morris, and Nick Bolton; at Microsoft, he introduced massive synthetic training data for Kinect for Xbox 360; and was science lead on the real-time hand tracking in Microsoft's HoloLensHis research interests are broadspanning computer visiongraphics, machine learning, neuroscience, and most recently programming languages. He has published numerous highly-cited papers, and received many awards for his work, including ten “best paper” prizes at various venues, the Silver medal of the Royal Academy of Engineering, and the BCS Roger Needham award. He is a fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, the British Computer Society, and the International Association for Pattern Recognition.
  
-==== Bio ====+Before joining Graphcore in 2022, he spent 15 years at Microsoft, and before then, he was a Royal Society University Research Fellow at Oxford University, having previously studied at Edinburgh University, Heriot-Watt University, and University College, Cork.
  
-Andrew Fitzgibbon leads the All Data AI (ADAgroup at Microsoft Research, Cambridge, UKHe is best known for his work on 3D vision, having been a core contributor to the Emmy-award-winning 3D camera tracker “boujou” and Kinect for Xbox 360, but his interests are broad, spanning computer vision, graphics, machine learning, and occasionally a little neuroscience He has published numerous highly-cited papers, and received many awards for his work, including ten “best paper” prizes at various venues, the Silver medal of the Royal Academy of Engineering, and the BCS Roger Needham awardHe is a fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, the British Computer Society, and the International Association for Pattern Recognition. Before joining Microsoft in 2005, he was a Royal Society University Research Fellow at Oxford University, having previously studied at Edinburgh University, Heriot-Watt University, and University College, Cork.+[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Fitzgibbon_(engineer)|Wikipedia]] [[https://twitter.com/awfidius|Twitter]] [[https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-fitzgibbon-952b9370|LinkedIn]] 
  
-[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Fitzgibbon_(engineer)|Wikipedia]] [[https://twitter.com/awfidius|Twitter]]+Email: awf@graphcore.ai 
 + 
 +** Shorter Bio (102 words) ** 
 +Andrew Fitzgibbon has been closely involved in the delivery of three groundbreaking computer vision and machine learning systems over two decades.  In 2000, he was computer vision lead on the Emmy-award-winning 3D camera tracker “Boujou”; in 2009 he introduced large-scale synthetic training data to Kinect for Xbox 360, and in 2019 was science lead on the team that shipped fully articulated hand tracking on HoloLens 2.  His passion is bringing the power of mathematics to the crucible of real-world engineering.  He has numerous research awards, including ten “best paper” prizes at leading conferences, and is a Fellow of the UK’s Royal Academy of Engineering. 
 + 
 +** Publications ** 
 +[[https://dblp.uni-trier.de/pid/f/AndrewWFitzgibbon.html|DBLP]][[https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=73t3lIcAAAAJ|Google Scholar]]
  
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