SMPTE 2020 KEYNOTE pRESENTERS
 

 

Anima Anandkumar
Anandkumar is a Bren Professor at Caltech, director of machine learning (ML) research at NVIDIA, and previously served as a principal scientist at Amazon Web Services (AWS). She has earned honors such as the Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, NSF Career Award, DoD Young Investigator Award, and faculty fellowships from Microsoft, Google, Facebook, and Adobe. She is passionate about designing principled AI algorithms and applying them in interdisciplinary applications, and her current research focus is on unsupervised AI, optimization, and tensor methods.

Michelle Munson
Munson is co-founder and CEO of Eluvio, which offers a global platform service for low-latency, high-quality content distribution, monetization, and asset servicing, just in time. She earned the 2019 SMPTE David Sarnoff Medal and numerous other technology awards. While at Aspera, which she founded in 2004 and led until 2017, Munson created the Emmy® Award-winning FASP transport technology used in the digital media supply chain for high-speed, low-cost, secure digital content transport. She holds several patents and is an expert on content networking, machine learning, block chain, and cloud infrastructure — and a SMPTE Fellow.

Hanno Basse
Basse is chief technology officer (CTO) for Microsoft's Azure Media & Entertainment and previously served as CTO for 20th Century Fox Film Corp. and as senior video president of broadcast systems engineering at DirecTV. As a SMPTE Fellow, he holds 28 patents and has overseen groundbreaking technical advances ranging from the rollout of HD, HDR, and UHD to initiatives driving virtual/augmented reality, immersive audio, and content protection. His current focus is on content production and postproduction workflows for studios and their surrounding ecosystems.

Bradford Young
Young is a cinematographer best known for his work on "Selma" (2014), "When They See Us" (2019), "A Most Violent Year" (2014), and "Arrival" (2016). "Selma" earned a BET Award for Best Movie in 2015, and "Arrival" earned him an Academy Award nomination, a Silver Frog award from Cameraimage, and nominations for BAFTA and ASC awards. He also has earned multiple awards at the Sundance Film Festival. Further credits include "White Lies, Black Sheep" (2007), "Pariah" (2011), "Restless City" (2011), "Middle of Nowhere" (2012), "Ain't Them Bodies Saints" (2013), and "Mother of George" (2013), as well as cinematography for music videos for artists including MGMT, Nora Jones, and Beck.

Paul Debevec
Debevec is a senior staff scientist in Google Research and an adjunct research professor at USC. His research in HDR imaging, image-based lighting, and photoreal digital actors has been recognized with two technical Academy Awards and SMPTE's 2017 Progress Medal. In the early 2000s, he originated the technique of surrounding actors with LED displays to create on-set, image-based lighting for virtual production. Techniques from his work have been used to create key visual effects sequences in "The Matrix," "Spider-Man 2," "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," "Avatar," "Gravity," Furious 7," and "Gemini Man," and to create a 3D portrait of U.S. President Barack Obama. More information is available at www.debevec.org.

Markus Gross
Gross is the vice president of research at Walt Disney Studios, director at DisneyResearch|Studios, and a professor of computer science and head of the Computer Graphics Laboratory at ETH Zurich. He earlier served as director of the Institute of Computational Sciences at ETH. His research interests include physically based modeling, computer animation, immersive displays, and video technology. Gross has co-founded more than 10 tech startups and has earned two technical achievement awards from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Ian Sansavera
Sansavera is the director of postproduction at 1UP Studios. A graduate of Columbia Chicago with a degree in television production, he has produced and edited video professionally for the past 15 years. By day, he is the content director for Team Liquid, one of the largest esports organizations in the world. By night, he teaches the masses on his YouTube channel, "Learn How to Edit Stuff," which is over 220,000 subscribers strong.