Litcius/Paper detail

Fast Image Reconstruction with an Event Camera

Cedric Scheerlinck, Henri Rebecq, Daniel Gehrig, Nick Barnes, Robert Mahony, Davide Scaramuzza

2020219 citationsDOI

Abstract

Event cameras are powerful new sensors able to capture high dynamic range with microsecond temporal resolution and no motion blur. Their strength is detecting brightness changes (called events) rather than capturing direct brightness images; however, algorithms can be used to convert events into usable image representations for applications such as classification. Previous works rely on hand-crafted spatial and temporal smoothing techniques to reconstruct images from events. State-of-the-art video reconstruction has recently been achieved using neural networks that are large (10M parameters) and computationally expensive, requiring 30ms for a forward-pass at 640 × 480 resolution on a modern GPU. We propose a novel neural network architecture for video reconstruction from events that is smaller (38k vs. 10M parameters) and faster (10ms vs. 30ms) than state-of-the-art with minimal impact to performance.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceArtificial intelligenceComputer visionBrightnessUSableSmoothingEvent (particle physics)Iterative reconstructionMotion blurPanning (audio)Image resolutionComputational photographyArtificial neural networkImage (mathematics)Pattern recognition (psychology)Image processingZoomPetroleum engineeringLens (geology)OpticsEngineeringWorld Wide WebQuantum mechanicsPhysicsAdvanced Memory and Neural ComputingNeural dynamics and brain functionFerroelectric and Negative Capacitance Devices
Fast Image Reconstruction with an Event Camera | Litcius