Title :
Conjunction search using a 1-D, analog VLSI-based, attentional search/tracking chip
Author :
Horiuchi, Timothy ; Niebur, Ernst
Author_Institution :
The Zanvyl Krieger Mind/Brain Inst., Johns Hopkins Univ., MD, USA
Abstract :
The ability of animals to select a limited region of sensory space for scrutiny is an important factor in dealing with cluttered or complex sensory environments. Such an “attentional” system in the visual domain is believed to be involved in both the perception of objects and the control of eye movements in primates. While we can intentionally guide our attention to perform a specific task, it is also reflexively drawn to “salient” features in our sensory input space. Understanding how high-level task information and lour-level stimulus information can combine to control our sensory processing is of great interest to both neuroscience and engineering. Towards this end, we have designed and fabricated a one-dimensional, analog VLSI vision chip that models covert attentional search and tracking. We extend previous analog VLSI work (Morris and DeWeerth, 1997) on the delayed onset of inhibition in a winner-take-all network to now use extracted image edges as input to the attentional saliency map and to perform serial search on a particular feature conjunction (spatial derivative and the direction-of-motion). We further demonstrate the ability to modify the circuit´s parameters “on-the-fly” to switch between a search mode and a tracking mode
Keywords :
CMOS analogue integrated circuits; CMOS image sensors; VLSI; analogue processing circuits; image processing equipment; tracking; 1D analog attentional search/tracking chip; WTA circuit; attentional saliency map; attentional search/tracking chip; conjunction search; extracted image edges; feature conjunction; one-dimensional analog VLSI vision chip; search mode; serial search; tracking mode; Animals; Control systems; Data mining; Neuroscience; Process control; Retina; Switches; Switching circuits; Very large scale integration; Visual system;
Conference_Titel :
Advanced Research in VLSI, 1999. Proceedings. 20th Anniversary Conference on
Conference_Location :
Atlanta, GA
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-0056-0
DOI :
10.1109/ARVLSI.1999.756054