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Imager Uses Neural Network Algorithms for Machine Vision

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Brent D. Johnson

Intelligent machines have long been the dream of systems integrators. The ability to install a component and walk away as it slowly sputters to life and begins learning its task has been the subject of science fiction for decades. The fantasy, however, has become reality.

Neural networks, which simulate the analog processing of human brain cells, are being applied in the machine vision environment, where pattern recognition of constantly changing elements demands complicated algorithms.

The zero instruction set chip invented by Guy Paillet of General Vision and IBM has been incorporated into Pulnix's ZiCam, enabling image patterns to be reduced to smaller components that can be independently modeled by separate neurons within a network. In other words, one neuron may receive information about the shape of the object, while another records the color. When the aggregate data is processed, it produces a memory of the object that includes each of these independent elements while retaining the entire image pattern.

Existing image recognition systems use normalized correlation or derived techniques that allow the fuzzy comparison between an inspected object and a single model. The ZiCam enables this comparison with 312 models in a few milliseconds. Furthermore, the real-time learning capability of the zero instruction set chip allows dynamic model addition and adaptation.

This is significant for machine vision because objects may be viewed under differing light conditions and in various orientations. The ability to recognize that an object is a chair, despite alterations in its appearance, will reduce the time that engineers must spend creating algorithms to compensate for these factors.

"The biggest issue here is that it is programming-free," Pulnix President Toshi Hori said. It can process new objects without new instructions because it learns as it goes. "You can treat it just like a human being. And the more you teach it, the more clever it gets."

Pulnix has several of the cameras working at beta sites and is almost ready for commercial release.
BAE Systems Sensor Solutions - Fairchild - FS Sensor Solutions 4/24 MR

Published: February 2003
Glossary
machine vision
Machine vision, also known as computer vision or computer sight, refers to the technology that enables machines, typically computers, to interpret and understand visual information from the world, much like the human visual system. It involves the development and application of algorithms and systems that allow machines to acquire, process, analyze, and make decisions based on visual data. Key aspects of machine vision include: Image acquisition: Machine vision systems use various...
Accent on Applicationsanalog processingApplicationsbrain cellsmachine visionmachine vision environmentneural networks

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