Paper
25 October 1988 Orientation-Selective VLSI Retina
Tim Allen, Carver Mead, Federico Faggin, Glenn Gribble
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 1001, Visual Communications and Image Processing '88: Third in a Series; (1988) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.969056
Event: Visual Communications and Image Processing III, 1988, Cambridge, MA, United States
Abstract
In both biological and artificial pattern-recognition systems, the detection of oriented light-intensity edges is an important preprocessing step. We have constructed a silicon VLSI device containing an array of photoreceptors with additional hardware for computing center-surround (edge-enhanced) response as well as edge orientation at every point in the receptor lattice. Because computing the edge orientations in the array local to each photoreceptor would have made each pixel-computation unit too large (thereby reducing the resolution of the device), we devised a novel technique for computing the orientations outside of the array. All the transducers and computational elements are analog circuits made with a conventional CMOS process.
© (1988) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Tim Allen, Carver Mead, Federico Faggin, and Glenn Gribble "Orientation-Selective VLSI Retina", Proc. SPIE 1001, Visual Communications and Image Processing '88: Third in a Series, (25 October 1988); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.969056
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Cited by 27 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Image processing

Retina

Analog electronics

Visual communications

Silicon

Very large scale integration

Transistors

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