Title :
A digital retina-like low-level vision processor
Author :
Mertoguno, S. ; Bourbakis, N.G.
Author_Institution :
Inf. Technol. Res. Inst., Wright State Univ., Dayton, OH, USA
Abstract :
This correspondence presents the basic design and the simulation of a low level multilayer vision processor that emulates to some degree the functional behavior of a human retina. This retina-like multilayer processor is the lower part of an autonomous self-organized vision system, called Kydon, that could be used on visually impaired people with a damaged visual cerebral cortex. The Kydon vision system, however, is not presented in this paper. The retina-like processor consists of four major layers, where each of them is an array processor based on hexagonal, autonomous processing elements that perform a certain set of low level vision tasks, such as smoothing and light adaptation, edge detection, segmentation, line recognition and region-graph generation. At each layer, the array processor is a 2D array of k×m hexagonal identical autonomous cells that simultaneously execute certain low level vision tasks. Thus, the hardware design and the simulation at the transistor level of the processing elements (PEs) of the retina-like processor and its simulated functionality with illustrative examples are provided in this paper.
Keywords :
array signal processing; computer vision; digital signal processing chips; self-adjusting systems; 2D array; Kydon; array processor; autonomous seff-organized vision system; digital retina-like low-level vision processor; edge detection; hardware design; hexagonal autonomous processing elements; light adaptation; line recognition; low-level multilayer vision processor; region-graph generation; segmentation; smoothing; transistor level simulation; visual cerebral cortex; visually impaired people; Adaptive arrays; Brain modeling; Cerebral cortex; Humans; Image edge detection; Machine vision; Nonhomogeneous media; Optical arrays; Retina; Smoothing methods;
Journal_Title :
Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part B: Cybernetics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSMCB.2003.816925