Title :
Real-time hierarchical visual tracking using a configurable computing machine
Author :
Pudipeddi, Bharadwaj ; Abbott, A. Lynn ; Athanas, Peter M.
Author_Institution :
Bradley Dept. of Electr. Eng., Virginia Polytech. Inst. & State Univ., Blacksburg, VA, USA
Abstract :
This paper describes a custom computing approach to real-time visual tracking. Traditionally, tracking systems require dedicated hardware to accommodate the computational demands and input/output rates imposed by real-time video sources. A radical alternative is represented by custom computing machines such as Splash 2, which use interconnected Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) to provide fine-grain parallelism and reconfigurability so that high-speed performance is possible for many different applications. The efficacy of such architectures to image-based computing is illustrated here through the implementation of a tracking system that consists of two parts: a Gaussian pyramid generator and a correlation-based tracker. The pyramid generator converts each input image to a hierarchy of images, each representing the original image at a different resolution. An object is tracked on successive frames by a coarse-to-fine search through this image hierarchy, using the sum of absolute differences as the matching criterion. Splash 2 performs these operations at rates of 15 or 30 frames per second. Its performance therefore rivals that of application-specific systems, although the architecture is inherently general-purpose in nature
Keywords :
computer vision; field programmable gate arrays; real-time systems; tracking; Gaussian pyramid generator; Splash 2; configurable computing machine; correlation-based tracker; custom computing approach; dedicated hardware; image-based computing; interconnected field-programmable gate arrays; real-time hierarchical visual tracking; real-time video sources; tracking system; Computer architecture; Concurrent computing; Field programmable gate arrays; Hardware; High performance computing; Image converters; Navigation; Parallel processing; Real time systems; Target tracking;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Architecture for Machine Perception, 1997. CAMP 97. Proceedings. 1997 Fourth IEEE International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Cambridge, MA
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-7987-5
DOI :
10.1109/CAMP.1997.631931