An Address-Event Image Sensor Network

We discuss an imaging architecture for sensor network applications, that employs a 32 times 32 address-event representation (AER) imager. At the sensor level, pixels convert light intensity into a pulse density modulated stream of address events. Two different types of COTS wireless radio nodes are used, along with two separate approaches to wireless data transmission - one as a train of AER addresses, and the other as a histogram of the active pixels. Information transmitted in the limited-bandwidth network yields effective means for detection and partial recognition of the object even at very low bit rates, yielding a maximum experimental frame-rate of close to 6fps

[1]  Teresa H. Ko,et al.  Distributed Feature Extraction for Event Identification , 2004, EUSAI.

[2]  Matt Welsh,et al.  Simulating the power consumption of large-scale sensor network applications , 2004, SenSys '04.

[3]  Deborah Estrin,et al.  Cyclops, image sensing and interpretation in wireless networks , 2004, SenSys '04.

[4]  Ian F. Akyildiz,et al.  Sensor Networks , 2002, Encyclopedia of GIS.

[5]  Eugenio Culurciello,et al.  ALOHA CMOS imager , 2004, 2004 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems (IEEE Cat. No.04CH37512).