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Technology Research News June 15, 2005 |
Single Camera Measures Speed Researchers have improved a method of determining depth information using a single camera. The advance allows a single camera to detect the speed of objects and could be used anywhere robotic vision is needed. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2006 Willie D. Jones |
Safer Driving in The Dead of Night Night vision systems use infrared sensors to let drivers see as much as three or four times farther ahead and help them quickly distinguish among objects. |
Technology Research News December 1, 2004 |
Multicamera Surveillance Automated Researchers have developed a multi-camera surveillance system that allows the user to indicate an object in one view and automatically zoom to that object in all other views. |
Technology Research News February 25, 2004 |
Scans pick up object orientation Researchers in Spain have improved the process of pattern recognition with a method of mapping three-dimensional objects in a way that records every possible point of view of the object. The method could be used to inspect the orientation and shapes of manufactured goods, and also for face recognition. |
Technology Research News July 30, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Eyes off, screen off Giving computers the ability to discern where you are looking means, among other possibilities, setting screens to go dormant when they don't have your attention. The trick to making it practical is keeping the energy-saving mechanism from using more energy than it saves. |
Technology Research News September 10, 2003 |
Neural net tracks skin color Researchers working to give computers and robots the ability to recognize gestures are up against several challenges. Researchers from China have come up with a way to use skin color to detect faces and hands. |
National Defense July 2011 Eric Beidel |
Swarming Robot Teams to Map, Survey Buildings In the future, robots may be the true first responders. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2005 |
OEM infrared camera modules These thermographic camera modules can be installed wherever heat distribution patterns must be visualized or measured. |
Technology Research News February 25, 2004 Kimberly Patch |
Model keeps virtual eyes right Researchers have developed a computer simulation of the areas in the primate brain that perform initial visual processing. "This model shows that very basic neural feature detectors may actually explain a lot of how attention is directed to particular objects in scenes," |
Macworld June 27, 2007 Peter Kirn |
Motion 3 3-D, paint and motion-tracking features add new depth to graphics tool. |
Industrial Physicist Miseo & Wright |
Developing a chemical-imaging camera Major developments in detector technology have made IR imagers and focalplane arrays available to industry and in technical areas such as quality control, where the cost was previously prohibitive. |
Home Toys April 2004 John Perry |
X-10 and Motion Detectors This extension to our X-10 system has now been running reliably for over two years, and it has the added advantage of giving us advance warning when visitors are coming and when the boys get back from school. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2005 Ben Ames |
Designers make incremental improvements to 2-G infrared viewers Military users of infrared scopes will have to wait another five or ten years to see full production of third-generation scopes. In the meantime, today's "2.5-generation" devices offer lighter weight, smaller size, and better power efficiency than older second-generation devices. |
Technology Research News March 24, 2004 Kimberly Patch |
Virtual people look realistically Researchers from Trinity College in Ireland have added memory to a neurobiological model of visual attention in order to generate more realistic animation for virtual reality characters. |
InternetNews March 6, 2006 Clint Boulton |
From Sun Labs: Remote Sensors, on The SPOT Sun Microsystems's Lab today will introduce Project Sun Small Programmable Object Technology, a remote control gadget that creates sensor-oriented applications for wireless sensor networks and consumer electronics. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2007 Giselle Weiss |
CERN's Discerning Detectors Detecting and processing Higgs boson particles has required scientists and engineers to develop silicon pixel sensors for a new kind of detector. The new device is the latest in several generations of electronic particle detectors introduced since the late 1960s. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2004 |
Air Force Eyes Combination Infrared Camera and Communications Device U.S. Air Force scientists are looking to Sensors Unlimited Inc. to develop a smart, multifunction, dual-wavelength combination video camera and communications tool for night-vision surveillance and reconnaissance applications. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2006 |
Remote intrusion-detection and surveillance system The system offers remote, unattended intrusion-detection and surveillance capabilities for protecting of military installations and perimeters, as well as borders and other assets associated with homeland defense. |
Home Toys December 2005 Rob Robinson |
Motion Simulation: Evolution of an Emerging Technology It's been a wild and thrilling ride so far as we've progressed from a prototype that wasn't at all commercially viable to a product line with 15 consumer models and from a mere 4 minutes of motion coding to well over 500 full-length motion pictures. |
Home Toys October 2003 Kevin Moss |
The Future of Home Automation on the PC This article discusses home automation, what's available for the PC today, what we can do and what we can't. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics September 2006 |
Electro-Optics Briefs BAE Systems offers infrared camera cores for military and rugged commercial applications... ITT wins Norwegian contract for night-vision systems... Sofradir wins contract for long-wave infrared detectors... etc. |
IndustryWeek January 20, 2010 Peter Alpern |
Beam Me Up a Part, Scotty As rapid prototyping matures as a technology, it's branched into new industries and is being used for more than producing prototypes. |
National Defense September 2012 Eric Beidel |
'Super' Camera Puts Human Eye to Shame The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and Duke University recently tested a camera that can read street signs and license plates from more than 270 yards away. |