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An FPGA-Based Omnidirectional Vision Sensor for Motion Detection on Mobile Robots
Author(s) -
Jones Y. Mori,
Janier Arias-García,
Camilo Sánchez-Ferreira,
Daniel M. Muñoz,
Carlos H. Llanos,
José Maurício Santos Torres da Motta
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of reconfigurable computing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.236
H-Index - 16
eISSN - 1687-7209
pISSN - 1687-7195
DOI - 10.1155/2012/148190
Subject(s) - computer science , background subtraction , computer vision , artificial intelligence , field programmable gate array , software , image processing , object detection , hardware architecture , machine vision , segmentation , computer hardware , image (mathematics) , pixel , programming language
This work presents the development of an integrated hardware/software sensor system for moving object detection and distance calculation, based on background subtraction algorithm. The sensor comprises a catadioptric system composed by a camera and a convex mirror that reflects the environment to the camera from all directions, obtaining a panoramic view. The sensor is used as an omnidirectional vision system, allowing for localization and navigation tasks of mobile robots. Several image processing operations such as filtering, segmentation and morphology have been included in the processing architecture. For achieving distance measurement, an algorithm to determine the center of mass of a detected object was implemented. The overall architecture has been mapped onto a commercial low-cost FPGA device, using a hardware/software co-design approach, which comprises a Nios II embedded microprocessor and specific image processing blocks, which have been implemented in hardware. The background subtraction algorithm was also used to calibrate the system, allowing for accurate results. Synthesis results show that the system can achieve a throughput of 26.6 processed frames per second and the performance analysis pointed out that the overall architecture achieves a speedup factor of 13.78 in comparison with a PC-based solution running on the real-time operating system xPC Target

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