English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

when we mount a camera on a robot for it's vision, then what kind of output is obtained and how such an output from the camera is fed as input to a microcontroller to process it.....pls someone help me

2007-12-05 13:02:50 · 4 answers · asked by santu 1 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

4 answers

The image file has several formats and what is used depends on the hardware and software.

2007-12-05 22:22:30 · answer #1 · answered by Swamy 7 · 0 0

We like to imagine that a video camera is connected to a screen somewhere, where a reasonable facsimile of what the robot "sees" is seen. This is simply not necessary; in fact, what happens the video image is broken down into simpler shapes, boundaries, etc. by image processing hardware. This cruder "image" can then be used by pattern recognition software to make some sense of it.

In fact, our brain does much the same thing, it breaks down the image, and send it to pattern recognition, color recognition, motion detection, etc. parts of the brain. Somehow it gets put back together on a more abstract layer to such an extent that we believe that we are actually seeing all the details in our field of view. You can find all kinds of optical illusions out there that that prove you're not seeing what you think you are; the link below is one of the coolest I've found.

The point I'm trying to make is that it is easy to understand and build machines that capture and display pictures exactly the way they look (cameras, displays, and recorders), but it's thorny challenge to build a computer/machine to interpret pictures. They are making progress though--look at the advance in self-driving vehicles from recent years.

2007-12-05 14:19:31 · answer #2 · answered by Joel 2 · 0 0

the commecial/industrial cameras available in market are driven by 5vdc power. The output is converted suitably by the processor generally built into the computer. It is the digital technology that processes the signal according to the matched soft-wares which is different in different systems. Generally the processing the signal is made for each other.

2007-12-05 14:29:29 · answer #3 · answered by JJ SHROFF 5 · 0 0

i'm a speeder and that i'd not want that. With each and each of the drivers on the throughway, it is going to likely be frustrating for cameras to seize everybody. And basically because the owner of a automobile receives stuck, that would not propose it really is who change into rushing. perchance in some parts, yet no longer each mile. it really is too many cameras and too expensive.

2016-10-26 13:22:14 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers