Vladimir Antonovich Kovalevsky | |
Other Names: | Wladimir Kovalevski |
Prof. Dr. | |
Native Name: | Владимир Антонович Ковалевский |
Native Name Lang: | ua |
Birth Date: | 5 September 1927 |
Birth Place: | Kharkiv, Ukrainian SSR |
Occupation: | physicist, mathematician, computer scientist |
Awards: | Recipient Gold medal Allunion Exhibition of National Economy, Moscow, 1964. State Prize, Central Committee of Communist Party of Ukraine, Kiev, 1978. |
Honours: | Listed as a noteworthy mathematician by Marquis Who's Who. |
Website: | http://www.kovalevsky.de |
Vladimir Antonovich Kovalevsky (born 1927) is a physicist. His research interests include digital geometry, digital topology, computer vision, image processing and pattern recognition.
Vladimir A. Kovalevsky received his diploma in physics from Kharkiv University (Ukraine) in 1950,[1] his first doctoral degree in technical sciences from the Central Institute of Metrology (Leningrad) in 1957 and his second doctoral degree in computer science from the Institute of Cybernetics of the Academy of Sciences of the Ukraine (Kiev) in 1968. From 1961 to 1983 he served as Head of Department of Pattern Recognition at that Institute. In 1983 he moved to the GDR. He worked as teaching professor or as scientific collaborator on universities in Germany[2] (Zentralinstitut für Kybernetik at the ADW, Berlin University of Applied Sciences and Technology, University of Rostock,[3] [4] Technische Universität Dresden[5]), USA (University of Pennsylvania, Drexel University), Mexico (National Autonomous University of Mexico), New Zealand (University of Auckland, Manukau Institute of Technology) and Korea (Chonbuk National University).
Over a period of nearly 40 years, Vladimir A. Kovalevsky made many fundamental and pioneering contributions to nearly every area of the above-mentioned fields. The research on digital image analysis (specifically on digital geometry and digital topology) is an important insertion to image processing and image analysis. He developed the statistically founded correlation method of recognizing optical patterns and the department “Pattern Recognition” at the Institute of Cybernetics, Kiew, has constructed in 1968 the optical character reading machine “Chars” implementing this method. The machine could read typed pages with high security.[6]
He suggested 1989 using topological knowledge, especially those of abstract cell complexes, in image processing. This has improved the definitions and the processing of boundaries and edges in two- and three-dimensional digital images. Vladimir A. Kovalevsky invented new efficient algorithms for edge detection in color images which can detect edges between subsets of different colors but the same lightness. He suggested efficient algorithms for tracing and encoding boundaries and also new definitions and recognition algorithms for recognizing digital straight segments.[7] Kovalevsky developed as programmer many projects implementing these algorithms.[8] [9] The results of his research are described in his monographs.