selective visual attention
Control of Selective Visual Attention: Modeling the "Where" Pathway
It is a generally accepted fact that the computations of early vision are massively parallel operations, i.e., applied in parallel to all parts of the visual field. This high degree of parallelism cannot be sustained in in ermediate and higher vision because of the astronomical number of different possible combination of features. Therefore, it becomes necessary to select only a part of the instantaneous sensory input for more detailed processing and to discard the rest. This is the mechanism of visual selective attention.
Analog VLSI Circuits for Attention-Based, Visual Tracking
Horiuchi, Timothy K., Morris, Tonia G., Koch, Christof, DeWeerth, Stephen P.
A one-dimensional visual tracking chip has been implemented using neuromorphic, analog VLSI techniques to model selective visual attention in the control of saccadic and smooth pursuit eye movements. The chip incorporates focal-plane processing to compute image saliency and a winner-take-all circuit to select a feature for tracking. The target position and direction of motion are reported as the target moves across the array. We demonstrate its functionality in a closed-loop system which performs saccadic and smooth pursuit tracking movements using a one-dimensional mechanical eye.
Analog VLSI Circuits for Attention-Based, Visual Tracking
Horiuchi, Timothy K., Morris, Tonia G., Koch, Christof, DeWeerth, Stephen P.
A one-dimensional visual tracking chip has been implemented using neuromorphic, analog VLSI techniques to model selective visual attention in the control of saccadic and smooth pursuit eye movements. The chip incorporates focal-plane processing to compute image saliency and a winner-take-all circuit to select a feature for tracking. The target position and direction of motion are reported as the target moves across the array. We demonstrate its functionality in a closed-loop system which performs saccadic and smooth pursuit tracking movements using a one-dimensional mechanical eye.
Analog VLSI Circuits for Attention-Based, Visual Tracking
Horiuchi, Timothy K., Morris, Tonia G., Koch, Christof, DeWeerth, Stephen P.
A one-dimensional visual tracking chip has been implemented using neuromorphic,analog VLSI techniques to model selective visual attention in the control of saccadic and smooth pursuit eye movements. Thechip incorporates focal-plane processing to compute image saliency and a winner-take-all circuit to select a feature for tracking. The target position and direction of motion are reported as the target moves across the array. We demonstrate its functionality ina closed-loop system which performs saccadic and smooth pursuit tracking movements using a one-dimensional mechanical eye. 1 Introduction Tracking a moving object on a cluttered background is a difficult task. When more than one target is in the field of view, a decision must be made to determine which target to track and what its movement characteristics are.
Control of Selective Visual Attention: Modeling the "Where" Pathway
Intermediate and higher vision processes require selection of a subset of the available sensory information before further processing. Usually, this selection is implemented in the form of a spatially circumscribed region of the visual field, the so-called "focus of attention" which scans the visual scene dependent on the input and on the attentional state of the subject. We here present a model for the control of the focus of attention in primates, based on a saliency map. This mechanism is not only expected to model the functionality of biological vision but also to be essential for the understanding of complex scenes in machine vision.
Control of Selective Visual Attention: Modeling the "Where" Pathway
Intermediate and higher vision processes require selection of a subset of the available sensory information before further processing. Usually, this selection is implemented in the form of a spatially circumscribed region of the visual field, the so-called "focus of attention" which scans the visual scene dependent on the input and on the attentional state of the subject. We here present a model for the control of the focus of attention in primates, based on a saliency map. This mechanism is not only expected to model the functionality of biological vision but also to be essential for the understanding of complex scenes in machine vision.
Control of Selective Visual Attention: Modeling the "Where" Pathway
Intermediate and higher vision processes require selection of a subset of the available sensory information before further processing. of a spatiallyUsually, this selection is implemented in the form circumscribed region of the visual field, the so-called "focus of attention" which scans the visual scene dependent on the input and of the subject. We here present a model foron the attentional state of the focus of attention in primates, based on a saliencythe control This mechanism is not only expected to model the functionalitymap. of biological vision but also to be essential for the understanding of complex scenes in machine vision.