As conventional frame-based cameras suffer from high energy consumption and latency, several new types of image sensors have been devised, with some of them exploiting the sparsity of natural images in some transform domain. Instead of sampling the full image, those devices capture only the coefficients of the most relevant spatial frequencies. The number of samples can be even sparser if a signal only needs to be classified rather than being fully reconstructed. Based on the corresponding mathematical framework, we developed an image sensor that can be trained to classify optically projected images by reading out the few most relevant pixels. The device is based on a two-dimensional array of metal–semiconductor–metal photodetectors with individually tunable photoresponsivity values. We demonstrate its use for the classification of handwritten digits with an accuracy comparable to that achieved by readout of the full image, but with lower delay and energy consumption.
CITATION STYLE
Mennel, L., Polyushkin, D. K., Kwak, D., & Mueller, T. (2022). Sparse pixel image sensor. Scientific Reports, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-09594-y
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