About the School
Information for Students
Research and Industry
Contact us
General Enquiries and Student Enquiry Centre
The Student Enquiry Centre is a "one-stop" shop for all student enquiries. The Centre is open from 8.30am to 5.00pm Monday to Friday. Staff provide basic assistance and advice to students regarding the courses offered by the Faculty of Informatics, including appropriate referral to general and academic staff within the Faculty and associated Schools.
A detailed summary of the services available can be found here.
Faculty of Informatics International Office
The International Office provides a one-stop service for SISAT and SCSSE international students studying on campus and off shore in matters regarding general enquiries, enrolment, orientation, degree selection, subject offerings and advanced standing.
Further information can be found at here.
Undergraduate and Postgraduate Course Coordinators
Course coordinators are the primary contact for student enquiries regarding course information and changes to programs of study. Their consultation hours can be found at here.
A summary of Undergraduate course coordinators for the current session can be found at here.
A summary of Postgraduate course coordinators for the current session can be found at: here.
News
- Game development teams’ success
- Strong student participation for ‘Battle of the Operating Systems’
- UOW academic leads ANSTO computing upgrade
- Government announces seven UOW academics as Future Fellows
- iPhone workshops prove a hit
- Microsoft games developer makes special return to UOW
- Counter-terrorism grant as quantum computers emerge
- Region to benefit from ICT industry cluster launch
Workshops and Seminars
Title: The Application of Microsimulation to Risk Modelling
Speaker: Mr Duc Thanh Nguyen
Day: Wednesday 4/11/2009
Location: Building 3. Common Staff Room
Time: 11.30-12.30
Abstract: Abstract: Human detection from still images and videos is a crucial step of human motion analysis that currently receives much attention in computer vision area. This presentation is to provide a comprehensive review on recent developments of human detection and then present a detection method employing local contour-appearance features. Experimental results and comparison with other state-of-the-art human detection methods will be presented. Finally, trends and future directions will be indicated and discussed by way of posing some of the remaining key problems.

