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Published July 1996 | Published
Journal Article Open

Analog VLSI architectures for motion processing: from fundamental limits to system applications

Abstract

This paper discusses some of the fundamental issues in the design of highly parallel, dense, low-power motion sensors in analog VLSI. Since photoreceptor circuits are an integral part of all visual motion sensors, we discuss how the sizing of photosensitive areas can affect the performance of such systems. We review the classic gradient and correlation algorithms and give a survey of analog motion-sensing architectures inspired by them. We calculate how the measurable speed range scales with signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for a classic Reichardt sensor with a fixed time constant. We show how this speed range may be improved using a nonlinear filter with an adaptive time constant, constructed out of a diode and a capacitor, and present data from a velocity sensor based on such a filter. Finally, we describe how arrays of such velocity sensors call be employed to compute the heading direction of a moving subject and to estimate the time-to-contact between the sensor and a moving object.

Additional Information

© 1996 IEEE. The frequency response data shown in Fig. 1(a) were provided by T. Delbruck. The image sequences used in Section VIII were recorded with a camera developed by Rockwell International Corporation and were provided by B. Mathur. Fabrication of the integrated circuits was provided by MOSIS.

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Created:
September 15, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023