Dynamic Graphics Project

{{Short description|Research laboratory at the University of Toronto}}

{{Infobox laboratory

| name = Dynamic Graphics Project

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| motto = The enhancement of human creativity through advances in human-computer interaction, user interface design, and interactive computer graphics.http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=109006 The University of Toronto Dynamic Graphics Project, Baecker et al. 1991

| established = {{Start date and age|1967}} [http://hciweb.cs.toronto.edu/DGPis40/index.html "DGP is 40" - Reunion website]

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| research_field = Computer Graphics, Human Computer Interaction, Computer Vision

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| head = University of Toronto

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| address = 40 St. George Street

| city = Toronto

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| province = Ontario

| country = Canada

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| operating_agency = University of Toronto

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| website = [http://www.dgp.toronto.edu www.dgp.toronto.edu]

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The Dynamic Graphics Project (commonly referred to as dgp) is an interdisciplinary research laboratory at the University of Toronto devoted to projects involving Computer Graphics, Computer Vision, Human Computer Interaction, and Visualization. The lab began as the computer graphics research group of Computer Science Professor {{ill|Leslie Mezei|fr}} in 1967.{{Cite web|url=http://hciweb.cs.toronto.edu/DGPis40/speakers_session5.html|title = Dgpis40}} Mezei invited Bill Buxton, a pioneer of human–computer interaction to join. In 1972, Ronald Baecker, another HCI pioneer joined dgp, establishing dgp as the first Canadian university group focused on computer graphics and human-computer interaction.http://graphicsinterface.org/wp-content/uploads/gi2005-frontmatter.pdf Ron Baecker CHCCS 2005 Achievement Award According to csrankings.org, for the combined subfields of computer graphics, HCI, and visualization the dgp is the number one research institution in the world.{{Cite web|url=http://csrankings.org/#/index?graph&chi&visualization&world|title = CSRankings|year = 2020|last1 = Berger|first1 = Emery D.}}

Since then, dgp has hosted many well known faculty and students in computer graphics, computer vision and HCI (e.g., Alain Fournier, Bill Reeves, Jos Stam, Demetri Terzopoulos, Marilyn Tremaine). dgp also occasionally hosts artists in residence (e.g., Oscar-winner Chris Landreth{{Cite web|url=https://www.utoronto.ca/news/oscar-winning-animator-and-filmmaker-chris-landreth-u-t-computer-science|title = Oscar-winning animator and filmmaker Chris Landreth at U of T computer science}}). Many past and current researchers at Autodesk (and before that Alias Wavefront) graduated after working at dgp.{{Cite web|url=http://hciweb.cs.toronto.edu/DGPis40/alumni.php?page=home|title=Dgpis40}} dgp is located in the St. George Campus of University of Toronto in the Bahen Centre for Information Technology. dgp researchers regularly publish at ACM SIGGRAPH, ACM SIGCHI and ICCV.

dgp hosts the Toronto User Experience (TUX) Speaker Series and the Sanders Series Lectures.{{cite web |url=http://www.tux-hci.org/ |title=Home |website=tux-hci.org}}

Notable alumni

  • Bill Buxton (MS 1978)
  • James McCrae (PhD 2013)
  • Dimitris Metaxas (PhD 1992)
  • Bill Reeves (MS 1976, Ph.D. 1980){{Cite web|url=https://www.utoronto.ca/news/honorary-graduate-william-reeves|title = Honorary graduate William Reeves}}
  • Jos Stam (MS 1991, Ph.D. 1995){{Cite web|url=http://www.dgp.toronto.edu/people/stam/reality/Research/pub.html|title = Jos Stam: Publications}}

References