6533b824fe1ef96bd12809d8
RESEARCH PRODUCT
HDR-ARtiSt: High Dynamic Range Advanced Real-Time Imaging System
Dominique GinhacMatthieu RosseBarthélémy HeyrmanPierre-jean Lapraysubject
[ INFO.INFO-TS ] Computer Science [cs]/Signal and Image Processing[INFO.INFO-TS] Computer Science [cs]/Signal and Image ProcessingComputer scienceHardware platformReal-time computingComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONImage processingVideo camera02 engineering and technologyTone mapping[ SPI.SIGNAL ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processinglaw.invention[INFO.INFO-TS]Computer Science [cs]/Signal and Image ProcessinglawHistogram0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringHigh dynamic rangeFPGA[SPI.SIGNAL] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processingHardware architectureCMOS sensorLiquid-crystal displayreal timePixelbusiness.industryDynamic range020207 software engineeringHigh Dynamic RangeFrame rate[SPI.TRON] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Electronics[ SPI.TRON ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Electronicsimage processing[SPI.TRON]Engineering Sciences [physics]/ElectronicsIEEE020201 artificial intelligence & image processingbusiness[SPI.SIGNAL]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processingComputer hardwaredescription
International audience; This paper describes the HDR-ARtiSt hardware platform, a FPGA-based architecture that can produce a real- time high dynamic range video from successive image acquisition. The hardware platform is built around a standard low dynamic range (LDR) CMOS sensor and a Virtex 5 FPGA board. The CMOS sensor is a EV76C560 provided by e2v. This 1.3 Megapixel device offers novel pixel integration/readout modes and em- bedded image pre-processing capabilities including multiframe acquisition with various exposure times. Our approach consists of a hardware architecture with different algorithms: double exposure control during image capture, building of an HDR image by combining the multiple frames, and final tone mapping for viewing on a LCD display. Our video camera system is able to achieve a real-time video rate of 30 frames per second for a full sensor resolution of 1, 280 × 1, 024 pixels.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-05-20 |