Gilson G de Lima


Ph.D. Student
Research Assistant
Supplementary Teaching Assistant

Room: Barus & Holley 317
Phone: (401) 863-6179
Email: gilson_lima@brown.edu
URL: http://www.lems.brown.edu/~ggoncalv/
Curriculum Vitae: Download

Biography/Interests

I joined the School of Engineering (as a PhD student in Electrical Engineering ) at Brown University in the Fall of 2009 after five years at Federal University of Ceara (Brazil), where I earned my Bachelor of Science degree in Telematics Engineering.

During my first two years at Brown, I also worked as a supplemmentary teaching assistant for the courses: ENGN 1570 Linear System Analysis (Fall 2010) and ENGN 052 Electrical Circuits and Signals (Spring 2011). In Fall 2011, I was an STA for ENGN 1570 for the second time. During Spring 2012, I am an STA for ENGN 2520 Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning.

In May 2011, I received a Master of Science degree in Engineering from Brown University. During Summer 2011, I worked at Hewlett Packard Laboratories headquarters in Palo Alto, CA. HP is also sponsoring the 3rd year of my PhD studies thanks to a research grant that prof. Gabriel Taubin was awarded.

During my undergraduate period I worked part-time for a few years in an Image Processing Group (LABVIS, Brazil). I also was a computer programmer intern in an IT company (Atlanta Tecnologia de Informacao, Brazil), also part-time during five months. I did my eighth and ninth semesters in France, sponsored by a Brazilian Government scholarship (BRAFITEC) that I was awarded. During that period in Europe, I studied Electrical Engineering at INSA Lyon (National Institute of Applied Sciences of Lyon) in a concentration of Image and Signal Processing. After that, I was full-time engaged in the research headquarters of one of the main French companies (Renault), where I worked as an intern (BAC+5, senior year in the French system) dealing with signal processing in the Division of Acoustics.

After I earned my Bachelor of Engineering, I worked as temporary university teacher at Federal University of Ceara for a few months. During the same time, I offered consultancy to an IT research lab (GREAT, Brazil) and worked part-time in the local facilities of the Brazilian National Center of High Performance Computing. After that, by August 2009, I started working and studying at Brown University.

Currently, my main research interest is: real-time stereo-based view synthesis for autostereoscopic rendering systems.

My advisor is Professor Gabriel Taubin (former IBM T. J. Watson Research Center employee), who is acknowledged worldwide by his contributions specially in the Geometric modeling field. Prof. Taubin is also Editor-in-Chief of IEEE Computer Graphics & Applications magazine.