Literature DB >> 25389241

Coded acquisition of high frame rate video.

Reza Pournaghi, Xiaolin Wu.   

Abstract

High frame rate video (HFV) is an important investigational tool in sciences, engineering, and military. In ultrahigh speed imaging, the obtainable temporal, spatial, and spectral resolutions are limited by the sustainable throughput of in-camera mass memory, lower bound of exposure time, and illumination conditions. To break these bottlenecks, we propose a new coded video acquisition framework that employs K ≥ 2 cameras, each of which makes random measurements of the video signal in both temporal and spatial domains. For each of the K cameras, this multicamera strategy greatly relaxes the stringent requirements in memory speed, shutter speed, and illumination strength. The recovery of HFV from these random measurements is posed and solved as a large-scale l1 minimization problem by exploiting joint temporal and spatial sparsities of the 3D signal. Three coded video acquisition techniques of varied tradeoffs between performance and hardware complexity are developed: 1) framewise coded acquisition; 2) pixelwise coded acquisition; and 3) columnwise-rowwise coded acquisition. The performances of these techniques are analyzed in relation to the sparsity of the underlying video signal. Simulations of these new HFV capture techniques are carried out and experimental results are reported.

Year:  2014        PMID: 25389241     DOI: 10.1109/TIP.2014.2368359

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Image Process        ISSN: 1057-7149            Impact factor:   10.856


  3 in total

1.  Temporal super-resolution microscopy using a hue-encoded shutter.

Authors:  Christian Jaques; Emmanuel Pignat; Sylvain Calinon; Michael Liebling
Journal:  Biomed Opt Express       Date:  2019-08-22       Impact factor: 3.732

2.  A High-Speed Imaging Method Based on Compressive Sensing for Sound Extraction Using a Low-Speed Camera.

Authors:  Ge Zhu; Xu-Ri Yao; Zhi-Bin Sun; Peng Qiu; Chao Wang; Guang-Jie Zhai; Qing Zhao
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2018-05-11       Impact factor: 3.576

3.  Aliasing mitigation in optical microscopy of dynamic biological samples by use of temporally modulated color illumination and a standard RGB camera.

Authors:  Christian Jaques; Michael Liebling
Journal:  J Biomed Opt       Date:  2020-10       Impact factor: 3.170

  3 in total

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