Title :
Fast Vision Through Frameless Event-Based Sensing and Convolutional Processing: Application to Texture Recognition
Author :
Pérez-Carrasco, José Antonio ; Acha, Begoñna ; Serrano, Carmen ; Camuñas-Mesa, Luis ; Serrano-Gotarredona, Teresa ; Linares-Barranco, Bernabé
Author_Institution :
Dipt. Teor. de la Serial, Univ. de Sevilla, Sevilla, Spain
fDate :
4/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Address-event representation (AER) is an emergent hardware technology which shows a high potential for providing in the near future a solid technological substrate for emulating brain-like processing structures. When used for vision, AER sensors and processors are not restricted to capturing and processing still image frames, as in commercial frame-based video technology, but sense and process visual information in a pixel-level event-based frameless manner. As a result, vision processing is practically simultaneous to vision sensing, since there is no need to wait for sensing full frames. Also, only meaningful information is sensed, communicated, and processed. Of special interest for brain-like vision processing are some already reported AER convolutional chips, which have revealed a very high computational throughput as well as the possibility of assembling large convolutional neural networks in a modular fashion. It is expected that in a near future we may witness the appearance of large scale convolutional neural networks with hundreds or thousands of individual modules. In the meantime, some research is needed to investigate how to assemble and configure such large scale convolutional networks for specific applications. In this paper, we analyze AER spiking convolutional neural networks for texture recognition hardware applications. Based on the performance figures of already available individual AER convolution chips, we emulate large scale networks using a custom made event-based behavioral simulator. We have developed a new event-based processing architecture that emulates with AER hardware Manjunath´s frame-based feature recognition software algorithm, and have analyzed its performance using our behavioral simulator. Recognition rate performance is not degraded. However, regarding speed, we show that recognition can be achieved before an equivalent frame is fully sensed and transmitted.
Keywords :
digital signal processing chips; image recognition; image texture; neural nets; video signal processing; AER convolutional chips; AER spiking convolutional neural network; address event representation; commercial frame based video technology; custom made event based behavioral simulator; emergent hardware technology; event based processing architecture; frameless event based sensing; large scale convolutional neural network; pixel level event based frameless manner; texture recognition hardware application; AER chips; Address–event representation (AER); convolutional neural networks; event coding and processing; real-time vision hardware processing; spike signal processing; texture retrieval; vision chips; Form Perception; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Neural Networks (Computer); Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Time Factors; Vision, Ocular;
Journal_Title :
Neural Networks, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNN.2009.2039943