Heriot-Watt University, University of Glasgow, and University of Strathclyde: Detecting and tracking particles at high speed.
Aided by Prophesee’s metavision sensing technologies, researchers at the University of Glasgow, Heriot-Watt University, and the University of Strathclyde have discovered ways to leverage event-based vision’s high-speed particle detection and tracking capabilities to perform high-speed, cost-efficient microfluidic analysis. The team managed to profile particles down to 1 µm and capture data at a time resolution equivalent of 20,000 images per second, leveraging standard fluorescence microscope and lighting.
National University of Singapore: Giving robots a human sense of touch.
Researchers at the Collaborative, Learning, and Adaptive Robots lab and TEE Research Group at National University of Singapore are taking advantage of the benefits of event-based vision, in combination with touch, to give robots a next-generation sense of touch to help them grip and identify objects. The team’s skin sensor reaches speeds 1000× faster than a human’s sensory system, and the system enabled rotational slip detection in 0.08 s.
Western Sydney University: Exploring the skies and tracking space debris.
Astrosite, a world-first neuromorphic-inspired mobile telescope observatory developed by the International Centre for Neuromorphic Systems at Western Sydney University, is using event-based sensing as a more efficient and low-power alternative for space situational awareness to help address the growing issue of space debris. Their system enables continuous day and night high-performance operations at microsecond time resolution while generating 10× to 1000× less data.