| dc.description.abstract | For applications involving the control of  moving vehicles, the recovery of relative  motion between a camera and its  environment is of high utility. This thesis  describes the design and testing of a real-time analog VLSI chip which estimates the  focus of expansion (FOE) from measured  time-varying images. Our approach assumes  a camera moving through a fixed world with  translational velocity; the FOE is the projection  of the translation vector onto the image plane.  This location is the point towards which the  camera is moving, and other points appear to  be expanding outward from. By way of the  camera imaging parameters, the location of  the FOE gives the direction of 3-D translation.  The algorithm we use for estimating the FOE  minimizes the sum of squares of the  differences at every pixel between the  observed time variation of brightness and the  predicted variation given the assumed  position of the FOE. This minimization is not  straightforward, because the relationship  between the brightness derivatives depends  on the unknown distance to the surface being  imaged. However, image points where  brightness is instantaneously constant play a  critical role. Ideally, the FOE would be at the  intersection of the tangents to the iso-brightness contours at these "stationary"  points. In practice, brightness derivatives are  hard to estimate accurately given that the  image is quite noisy. Reliable results can  nevertheless be obtained if the image  contains many stationary points and the point  is found that minimizes the sum of squares of  the perpendicular distances from the tangents  at the stationary points. The FOE chip  calculates the gradient of this least-squares  minimization sum, and the estimation is  performed by closing a feedback loop around  it. The chip has been implemented using an  embedded CCD imager for image acquisition  and a row-parallel processing scheme. A 64  x 64 version was fabricated in a 2um CCD/ BiCMOS process through MOSIS with a  design goal of 200 mW of on-chip power, a  top frame rate of 1000 frames/second, and a  basic accuracy of 5%. A complete  experimental system which estimates the  FOE in real time using real motion and image  scenes is demonstrated. | en_US |