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Journal ArticleDOI

Pulse-Modulation Imaging—Review and Performance Analysis

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TLDR
Analytical models and a universal figure of merit - image quality and dynamic range to energy complexity factor are proposed to quantitatively assess different PM imagers across the entire spectrum of PM architectures.
Abstract
In time-domain or pulse-modulation (PM) imaging, the incident light intensity is not encoded in amounts of charge, voltage, or current as it is in conventional image sensors. Instead, the image data are represented by the timing of pulses or pulse edges. This method of visual information encoding optimizes the phototransduction individually for each pixel by abstaining from imposing a fixed integration time for the entire array. Exceptionally high dynamic range (DR) and improved signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) are immediate benefits of this approach. In particular, DR is no longer limited by the power-supply rails as in conventional complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) complementary metal-oxide semiconductor active pixel sensors, thus providing relative immunity to the supply-voltage scaling of modern CMOS technologies. In addition, PM imaging naturally supports pixel-parallel analog-to-digital conversion, thereby enabling high temporal resolution/frame rates or an asynchronous event-based array readout. The applications of PM imaging in emerging areas, such as sensor network, wireless endoscopy, retinal prosthesis, polarization imaging, and energy harvesting are surveyed to demonstrate the effectiveness of PM imaging in low-power, high-performance machine vision, and biomedical applications of the future. The evolving design innovations made in PM imaging, such as high-speed arbitration circuits and ultra-compact processing elements, are expected to have even wider impacts in disciplines beyond CMOS image sensors. This paper thoroughly reviews and classifies all common PM image sensor architectures. Analytical models and a universal figure of merit - image quality and dynamic range to energy complexity factor are proposed to quantitatively assess different PM imagers across the entire spectrum of PM architectures.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

STDP and STDP variations with memristors for spiking neuromorphic learning systems.

TL;DR: This paper reviews several ways of realizing asynchronous Spike-Timing-Dependent-Plasticity (STDP) using memristor as synapses, and shows how to implement these rules in cross-bar architectures that comprise massive arrays of memristors.
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Retinomorphic event-based vision sensors: Bioinspired cameras with spiking output

TL;DR: It is suggested that bioinspired vision systems have the potential to outperform conventional, frame-based vision systems in many application fields and to establish new benchmarks in terms of redundancy suppression and data compression, dynamic range, temporal resolution, and power efficiency.
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Multicasting Mesh AER: A Scalable Assembly Approach for Reconfigurable Neuromorphic Structured AER Systems. Application to ConvNets

TL;DR: A modular, scalable approach to assembling hierarchically structured neuromorphic Address Event Representation (AER) systems, in which case a special bidirectional parallel-serial AER link with flow control is exploited, using the FPGA Rocket-I/O interfaces.
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Neuromorphic neural interfaces: from neurophysiological inspiration to biohybrid coupling with nervous systems

TL;DR: The sophistication of current neuromorphic systems now allows direct interfaces with large neuronal networks and circuits, resulting in potentially interesting clinical applications for neuroengineering systems, neuroprosthetics and neurorehabilitation.
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Neuromorphic Stereo Vision: A Survey of Bio-Inspired Sensors and Algorithms.

TL;DR: This work investigates sensors and algorithms for event-based stereo vision leading to more biologically plausible robots and focuses mainly on binocular stereo vision.
References
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A 128 $\times$ 128 120 dB 15 $\mu$ s Latency Asynchronous Temporal Contrast Vision Sensor

TL;DR: This silicon retina provides an attractive combination of characteristics for low-latency dynamic vision under uncontrolled illumination with low post-processing requirements by providing high pixel bandwidth, wide dynamic range, and precisely timed sparse digital output.
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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.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Active Pixel Sensors: Are CCD's Dinosaurs?

TL;DR: ActivePixel Sensor (APS) as mentioned in this paper is a detector array technology that has at least one active transistor within the pixel unit cell, which eliminates the need for nearly perfect charge transfer, which makes CCD's radiation'soft' and difficult to use under low light conditions, difficult to integrate with on-chip electronics, difficulty to use at low temperatures, and difficulty to manufacture in non-silicon materials that extend wavelength response.
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 ArticleDOI

Studying the feasibility of energy harvesting in a mobile sensor network

TL;DR: The problem of uneven energy consumption is characterized, energy harvesting is suggested as a possible solution, and a simple analytical framework is provided to evaluate energy consumption and the scheme.
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