Biologically Inspired Foveal Sensing in Infrared Cameras

Under a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) contract from the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), Nova Sensors of Solvang, CA, developed a family of camera systems that provide variable-acuity superpixel imaging (VASI™) capabilities. This advanced imaging technology permits maximum-resolution focus on regions of interest from the visible to infrared (IR) spectrum, while significantly reducing the bandwidth required for image readout and processing. The VASI-based cameras' builtin capacity for frame-to-frame, dynamically programmable spatial resolution emulates the biological paradigm of foveal vision.

How it Works

The biological makeup of the human eye entails a small area of high resolution (the foveal region), with radially decreasing peripheral clarity. VASI technology mimics the human foveal vision system's function, in that after performing on-chip spatial binning, system sensors sample the "most important" image information at high spatial resolution and the "less interesting" information at lower spatial resolution. This guarantees that key image content is preserved. It also ensures both that the total field of view (FOV) is always monitored (should other interesting objects appear in the periphery), and that the highest possible frame rates are produced for a fixed bandwidth or, alternately, for the lowest possible bandwidth. Thus, even as VASI sensors are capturing and retaining essential image content, they are reducing the amount of image data received from large-format focal plane arrays (FPA).

An integrated-circuit architecture enables VASI readout of the entire FOV at high frame rates. The integrated circuitry facilitates this coverage by permitting larger pixels — superpixels — to be dynamically formed on the FPA in regions of relative unimportance, thus reducing the total number of pixel values that must be multiplexed off the FPA. In addition, this architecture can accommodate multiple high-resolution foveal regions "flown" around the imager's FOV at a frame rate that facilitates sampling of critical targets at the highest possible spatial resolution the imager can produce.

Where it Stands

The applications for multiresolution sensor (foveal) architecture are many. One such use of this biologically inspired technology lies in multiple-target tracking, wherein target characteristics such as vehicle motion demand incorporation of representative foveae in order to generate sequential imagery that reflects not only high-frame-rate operation, but also the required level of information recovery for mobile objects of interest.

More Information

For more information on Nova Sensors' foveal imaging architecture, click here  .



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Defense Tech Briefs Magazine

This article first appeared in the August, 2008 issue of Defense Tech Briefs Magazine (Vol. 2 No. 4).

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