IEEE Access (Jan 2019)

Bio-Inspired Stereo Vision Calibration for Dynamic Vision Sensors

  • Manuel J. Dominguez-Morales,
  • Angel Jimenez-Fernandez,
  • Gabriel Jimenez-Moreno,
  • Cristina Conde,
  • Enrique Cabello,
  • Alejandro Linares-Barranco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2019.2943160
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
pp. 138415 – 138425

Abstract

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Many advances have been made in the field of computer vision. Several recent research trends have focused on mimicking human vision by using a stereo vision system. In multi-camera systems, a calibration process is usually implemented to improve the results accuracy. However, these systems generate a large amount of data to be processed; therefore, a powerful computer is required and, in many cases, this cannot be done in real time. Neuromorphic Engineering attempts to create bio-inspired systems that mimic the information processing that takes place in the human brain. This information is encoded using pulses (or spikes) and the generated systems are much simpler (in computational operations and resources), which allows them to perform similar tasks with much lower power consumption, thus these processes can be developed over specialized hardware with real-time processing. In this work, a bio-inspired stereo-vision system is presented, where a calibration mechanism for this system is implemented and evaluated using several tests. The result is a novel calibration technique for a neuromorphic stereo vision system, implemented over specialized hardware (FPGA - Field-Programmable Gate Array), which allows obtaining reduced latencies on hardware implementation for stand-alone systems, and working in real time.

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