scholarly journals The Advance Image Generation Technology and Systems. Scattered Range Data Re-sampling for High-Speed Display of 3-D Objects.

1995 ◽  
Vol 49 (10) ◽  
pp. 1246-1251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shengjin Wang ◽  
Yi Cai ◽  
Makoto Sato
Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (18) ◽  
pp. 5414
Author(s):  
Hyun-Koo Kim ◽  
Kook-Yeol Yoo ◽  
Ho-Youl Jung

Recently, it has been reported that a camera-captured-like color image can be generated from the reflection data of 3D light detection and ranging (LiDAR). In this paper, we present that the color image can also be generated from the range data of LiDAR. We propose deep learning networks that generate color images by fusing reflection and range data from LiDAR point clouds. In the proposed networks, the two datasets are fused in three ways—early, mid, and last fusion techniques. The baseline network is the encoder-decoder structured fully convolution network (ED-FCN). The image generation performances were evaluated according to source types, including reflection data-only, range data-only, and fusion of the two datasets. The well-known KITTI evaluation data were used for training and verification. The simulation results showed that the proposed last fusion method yields improvements of 0.53 dB, 0.49 dB, and 0.02 in gray-scale peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR), color-scale PSNR, and structural similarity index measure (SSIM), respectively, over the conventional reflection-based ED-FCN. Besides, the last fusion method can be applied to real-time applications with an average processing time of 13.56 ms per frame. The methodology presented in this paper would be a powerful tool for generating data from two or more heterogeneous sources.


1992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kunihiro Hosono ◽  
Susumu Takeuchi ◽  
Yaichiro Watakabe ◽  
Tim Wihl ◽  
Mark Brandemuehl ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmet Çağrı Ulusoy ◽  
Gang Liu ◽  
Andreas Trasser ◽  
Hermann Schumacher

This paper presents a hardware efficient receiver architecture, to be used in low-cost, ultra-high rate 60 GHz wireless communication systems. The receiver utilizes a simple, feed-forward carrier recovery concept, performing phase and frequency synchronization in the analog domain. This enables 1-bit baseband processing without a need of ultra-high speed and high precision analog-to-digital conversion, offering a strong simplification of the system architecture and comparatively low power consumption. In a first prototype implementation, the receiver is realized in a low-cost SiGe technology as two separate ICs: the 60 GHz/5 GHz downconverter, and the intermediate frequency synchronous demodulator. The simple synchronous reception concept is experimentally validated for up to 3.5 Gbit/s data rate, which constituted the limit of the existing experimental setup. Furthermore, the downconverter demonstrates that low-cost technologies (fop/fmax ~ 0.75) can be used to realize short-range data links at 60 GHz, with low-noise amplifiers in a more performant technology as needed.


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