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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Integration of image capture and processing: beyond single-chip digital camera

Suk Hwan Lim, +1 more
- 15 May 2001 - 
- Vol. 4306, pp 219-226
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TLDR
In this article, the authors investigated the constraints on memory size and processing power that can be integrated with a CMOS image sensor in a 0.18 micrometers process and below.
Abstract
An important trend in the design of digital cameras is the integration of capture and processing onto a single CMOS chip. Although integrating the components of a digital camera system onto a single chip significantly reduces system size and power, it does not fully exploit the potential advantages of integration. We argue that a key advantage of integration is the ability to exploit the high speed imaging capability of CMOS image senor to enable new applications such as multiple capture for enhancing dynamic range and to improve the performance of existing applications such as optical flow estimation. Conventional digital cameras operate at low frame rates and it would be too costly, if not infeasible, to operate their chips at high frame rates. Integration solves this problem. The idea is to capture images at much higher frame rates than he standard frame rate, process the high frame rate data on chip, and output the video sequence and the application specific data at standard frame rate. This idea is applied to optical flow estimation, where significant performance improvements are demonstrate over methods using standard frame rate sequences. We then investigate the constraints on memory size and processing power that can be integrated with a CMOS image sensor in a 0.18 micrometers process and below. We show that enough memory and processing power can be integrated to be able to not only perform the functions of a conventional camera system but also to perform applications such as real time optical flow estimation.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

CMOS image sensors

TL;DR: This article provides a basic introduction to CMOS image-sensor technology, design and performance limits and presents recent developments and future research directions enabled by pixel-level processing, which promise to further improveCMOS image sensor performance and broaden their applicability beyond current markets.
Journal ArticleDOI

A 10000 frames/s CMOS digital pixel sensor

TL;DR: In this paper, a 352/spl times/288 pixel CMOS image sensor chip with per-pixel single-slope ADC and dynamic memory in a standard digital 0.18-/spl mu/m CMOS process is described.
Proceedings Article

Counting People in Crowds with a Real-Time Network of Simple Image Sensors

TL;DR: In this work, groups of image sensors segment foreground objects from the background, aggregate the resulting silhouettes over a network, and compute a planar projection of the scene's visual hull, which introduces a geometric algorithm that calculates bounds on the number of persons in each region of the projection, after phantom regions have been eliminated.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Counting people in crowds with a real-time network of simple image sensors

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose an alternative approach that directly estimates the number of people in a crowded environment, where groups of image sensors segment foreground objects from the background, aggregate the resulting silhouettes over a network, and compute a planar projection of the scene's visual hull.
Patent

Method and apparatus for editing heterogeneous media objects in a digital imaging device

TL;DR: In this paper, a method and apparatus for editing heterogeneous media objects in a digital imaging device having a display screen is presented, where each one of the media objects has one or more media types associated therewith, such as a still image, a sequential image, video, audio, and text.