Franklin C. Crow
Template:Short description Template:Infobox person Franklin "Frank" C. Crow is a computer scientist who has made important contributions to computer graphics, including some of the first practical spatial anti-aliasing techniques.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Crow also proposed the shadow volume technique for generating geometrically accurate shadows.
Education
[edit]Crow studied electrical engineering at the University of Utah College of Engineering under Ivan Sutherland,<ref name="Sutherland student Frank Crow">Template:Cite web</ref> a pioneer in computer graphics.
Career
[edit]Crow taught at the University of Texas, NYIT and Ohio State University and was involved with research at Xerox PARC, Apple Computer's Advanced Technology Group, and Interval Research.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
From 2001 to 2008, he worked for NVIDIA as a GPU architect designing rasterization algorithms.
Publications
[edit]- "Parallel Computing for Graphics." Advances in Computer Graphics, 1990:113-140.
- "Parallelism in rendering algorithms." in Graphics Interface 88, June 6–10, 1988, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. p. 87-96
- "Advanced Image Synthesis - Anti-Aliasing." Advances in Computer Graphics, 1985:419-440.
- "Advanced Image Synthesis - Surfaces." Advances in Computer Graphics, 1985:457-467.
- "Computational Issues in Rendering Anti-Aliased Detail." COMPCON, 1982:238-244.
- "Toward more complicated computer imagery." Computers & Graphics, 5(2-4):61-69 (1980).
- "The Aliasing Problem in Computer-Generated Shaded Images." Commun. ACM, 20(11):799-805 (1977).
- "Shadow Algorithms for Computer Graphics", Computer Graphics (SIGGRAPH '77 Proceedings), vol. 11, no. 2, 242–248.