Live demonstration: Real-time motor rotation frequency detection by spike-based visual and auditory AER sensory integration for FPGA — Antonio Ríos-Navarro (2015) | RDL Network
Multisensory integration is commonly used in various robotic areas to collect much more information from an environment using different and complementary types of sensors. This demonstration presents a scenario where the motor rotation frequency is obtained using an AER DVS128 retina chip (Dynamic Vision Sensor) and a frequency decomposer auditory system on a FPGA that mimics a biological cochlea. Both of them are spike-based sensors with Address-Event-Representation (AER) outputs. A new AER monitor hardware interface, based on a Spartan-6 FPGA, allows two operational modes: real-time (up to 5 Mevps through USB2.0) and off-line mode (up to 20 Mevps and 33.5 Mev stored in DDR RAM). The sensory integration allows the bio-inspired cochlea limit to provide a concrete range of rpm approaches, which are obtained by the silicon retina.
Ángel Jiménez-Fernández, Elena Cerezuela-Escudero, Lourdes Miró-Amarante, Manuel Jesus Dominguez Morales, F. Gómez-Rodríguez, Alejandro Linares-Barranco, G. Jiménez
Manuel Jesus Dominguez Morales, Ángel Jiménez-Fernández, Rafael Paz, Alejandro Linares-Barranco, D. Cascado, Juan López Coronado, José L. Muñoz, G. Jiménez
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