DocumentCode :
2747664
Title :
Telepresence for in-situ microscopy
Author :
Parvin, B. ; Taylor, J. ; Crowley, B. ; Wu, L. ; Johnston, W. ; Owen, D. ; O´Keefe, M.A. ; Dahmen, U.
Author_Institution :
Div. of Inf. & Comput. Sci., Lawrence Berkeley Lab., CA, USA
fYear :
1996
fDate :
17-23 Jun 1996
Firstpage :
481
Lastpage :
487
Abstract :
We present an approach for remote operation of instruments in the Internet environment. We have applied this approach to in-situ electron microscopy experiments that require dynamic interaction with the specimen under observation, as it is excited with external stimuli, i.e., temperature variation, EM field variation etc. The dynamic operations include control of the sample´s position and orientation under the electron beam, the illumination conditions and focus, etc. Remote control via wide area networks like the Internet that do not offer real time data and command delivery guarantees is not practical for the finely tuned adjustments that dynamic studies require. We suggest that an effective approach to remote operation for this class of dynamic control applications must involve automated control operations performed near the instrument in order to eliminate the wide area network real-time delivery requirement. Our approach to this problem is based on advanced computer vision algorithms that permit instrumentation adjustments to be made in response to information extracted from the video signal generated by the microscope imaging system. We have determined the type of servo loops needed to enable remote operation and collaboration, and have introduced a novel partitioning of the control architecture for implementing this approach
Keywords :
Internet; computer vision; computerised instrumentation; electron microscopy; multimedia computing; real-time systems; telecontrol; virtual reality; EM field variation; Internet; computer vision algorithms; dynamic control; dynamic interaction; electron microscopy; illumination conditions; in-situ microscopy; instrumentation; microscope imaging system; multimedia; real-time delivery requirement; remote control; remote operation; servo loops; telepresence; temperature variation; video signal; wide area networks; Automatic control; Electron beams; Electron microscopy; Focusing; IP networks; Instruments; Internet; Lighting; Temperature; Wide area networks;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Multimedia Computing and Systems, 1996., Proceedings of the Third IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Hiroshima
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-7438-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MMCS.1996.535896
Filename :
535896
Link To Document :
بازگشت