4.8 Article

Event-Based Vision: A Survey

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TPAMI.2020.3008413

Keywords

Event cameras; bio-inspired vision; asynchronous sensor; low latency; high dynamic range; low power

Funding

  1. SNSF-ERC Starting Grant
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation through the National Center of Competence in Research (NCCR) Robotics

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This paper provides a comprehensive overview of event-based vision, focusing on the applications and algorithms developed for event cameras. Event cameras differ from traditional cameras in their asynchronous measurement of per-pixel brightness changes, offering high temporal resolution, very high dynamic range, low power consumption, and high pixel bandwidth. The paper discusses techniques for processing events, including learning-based methods and specialized processors. It also highlights the remaining challenges and opportunities in the field of bio-inspired perception and interaction for machines.
Event cameras are bio-inspired sensors that differ from conventional frame cameras: Instead of capturing images at a fixed rate, they asynchronously measure per-pixel brightness changes, and output a stream of events that encode the time, location and sign of the brightness changes. Event cameras offer attractive properties compared to traditional cameras: high temporal resolution (in the order of mu s), very high dynamic range (140 dB versus 60 dB), low power consumption, and high pixel bandwidth (on the order of kHz) resulting in reduced motion blur. Hence, event cameras have a large potential for robotics and computer vision in challenging scenarios for traditional cameras, such as low-latency, high speed, and high dynamic range. However, novel methods are required to process the unconventional output of these sensors in order to unlock their potential. This paper provides a comprehensive overview of the emerging field of event-based vision, with a focus on the applications and the algorithms developed to unlock the outstanding properties of event cameras. We present event cameras from their working principle, the actual sensors that are available and the tasks that they have been used for, from low-level vision (feature detection and tracking, optic flow, etc.) to high-level vision (reconstruction, segmentation, recognition). We also discuss the techniques developed to process events, including learning-based techniques, as well as specialized processors for these novel sensors, such as spiking neural networks. Additionally, we highlight the challenges that remain to be tackled and the opportunities that lie ahead in the search for a more efficient, bio-inspired way for machines to perceive and interact with the world.

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