Publication | Closed Access
Image Processing Vision Systems: Standard Image Sensors Versus Retinas
17
Citations
24
References
2007
Year
Event CameraEngineeringHardware AlgorithmComputer ArchitectureComputational ComplexityImage SensorImage AnalysisVision SystemsVision SensorData Flow ExchangesImage ProcessingMachine VisionOphthalmologyPhysiological OpticComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceComputer VisionComputer Vision AlgorithmsEye TrackingImage Processor
To decrease the computational complexity of computer vision algorithms, one of the solutions is to achieve some low-level image processing on the sensor focal plan. It becomes a smart sensor device called a retina. This concept makes the vision systems more compact. It increases performances thanks to the reduction of data flow exchanges with external circuits. This paper presents a comparison relating two different vision system architectures. The first one implements a logarithmic complimentary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)/active pixel sensor interfaced to a microprocessor, where all computations are carried out. The second involves a CMOS sensor including analog processors allowing on-chip image processing. An external microprocessor is used to control the on-chip data flow and integrated operators. We have designed two vision systems as proof-of-concept. The comparison is related to image processing computation time, processing reliability, programmability, precision, bandwidth, and subsequent stages of computations.
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