As a graduate student at Ohio State in the mid-1970s, I inherited a unique c- puter vision laboratory from the doctoral research of previous students. They had designed and built an early frame-grabber to deliver digitized color video from a (very large) electronic video camera on a tripod to a mini-computer (sic) with a (huge!) disk drive—about the size of four washing machines. They had also - signed a binary image array processor and programming language, complete with a user’s guide, to facilitate designing software for this one-of-a-kindprocessor. The overall system enabled programmable real-time image processing at video rate for many operations. I had the whole lab to myself. I designed software that detected an object in the eldofview,trackeditsmovementsinrealtime,anddisplayedarunningdescription of the events in English. For example: “An object has appeared in the upper right corner.Itismovingdownandtotheleft.Nowtheobjectisgettingcloser.The object moved out of sight to the left”—about like that. The algorithms were simple, relying on a suf cient image intensity difference to separate the object from the background (a plain wall). From computer vision papers I had read, I knew that vision in general imaging conditions is much more sophisticated. But it worked, it was great fun, and I was hooked.
Produkteigenschaften
- Artikelnummer: 9781848003033
- Medium: Buch
- ISBN: 978-1-84800-303-3
- Verlag: Springer
- Erscheinungstermin: 06.10.2008
- Sprache(n): Englisch
- Auflage: 1. Auflage. 2008
- Serie: Advances in Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
- Produktform: Gebunden
- Gewicht: 1360 g
- Seiten: 284
- Format (B x H x T): 160 x 241 x 23 mm
- Ausgabetyp: Kein, Unbekannt