Pub. period:1994-2010
Pub. count:6
Number of co-authors:8
Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:
Takayuki Itoh:3Koji Koyamada's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:
Takayuki Itoh:9 Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking of them.
-- Alfred North Whitehead
Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann
Read Steve's chapter !
Sakamoto, Naohisa, Kawamura, Takuma, Koyamada, Koji and Nozaki, Kazunori (2010): Improvement of particle-based volume rendering for visualizing irregular volume data sets. In Computers & Graphics, 34 (1) pp. 34-42.
Itoh, Takayuki, Takakura, Hiroki, Sawada, Atsushi and Koyamada, Koji (2006): Hierarchical Visualization of Network Intrusion Detection Data. In IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, 26 (2) pp. 40-47.
Sakamoto, Naohisa and Koyamada, Koji (2005): Particle Generation from User-specified Transfer Function for Point-based Volume Rendering. In: 16th IEEE Visualization Conference VIS 2005 23-28 October, 2005, Minneapolis, MN, USA. p. 108.
Itoh, Takayuki, Yamaguchi, Yasushi and Koyamada, Koji (1996): Volume Thinning for Automatic Isosurface Propagation. In: IEEE Visualization 1996 1996. pp. 303-310.
Koyamada, Koji and Ito, Takayuki (1995): Fast generation of spherical slicing surfaces for irregular volume rendering. In The Visual Computer, 11 (3) pp. 167-175.
Itoh, Takayuki and Koyamada, Koji (1994): Isosurface Generation by Using Extrema Graphs. In: Bergeron, R. Daniel and Kaufman, Arie E. (eds.) VIS 1994 - Proceedings IEEE Visualization 1994 October 17-21, 1994, Washington, DC, USA. pp. 77-83.
Pub. period:1994-2010
Pub. count:6
Number of co-authors:8
Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:
Takayuki Itoh:3Koji Koyamada's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:
Takayuki Itoh:9 Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking of them.
-- Alfred North Whitehead
Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann
Read Steve's chapter !