Event cameras are novel vision sensors that output pixel-level brightness changes ("events") instead of traditional video frames. These asynchronous sensors offer several advantages over traditional cameras, such as, high temporal resolution, very high dynamic range, and no motion blur. To unlock the potential of such sensors, motion compensation methods have been recently proposed. We present a collection and taxonomy of twenty two objective functions to analyze event alignment in motion compensation approaches. We call them focus loss functions since they have strong connections with functions used in traditional shape-from-focus applications. The proposed loss functions allow bringing mature computer vision tools to the realm of event ca...
Event-based cameras have an incredible potential in real-time and real-world robotics. They would en...
Event cameras are novel sensors that output brightness changes in the form of a stream of asynchrono...
Event cameras are novel sensors that report brightness changes in the form of asynchronous “events” ...
Event cameras are novel vision sensors that output pixel-level brightness changes ("events") instead...
Event cameras are novel bio-inspired sensors which mimic the function of the human retina. Rather th...
Traditional frame-based cameras have become the de facto sensor of choice for a multitude of applica...
Event cameras are novel bio-inspired sensors which mimic the function of the human retina. Rather th...
Event cameras are bio-inspired sensors that differ from conventional frame cameras: Instead of captu...
We present a unifying framework to solve several computer vision problems with event cameras: motion...
Event cameras are bio-inspired vision sensors that output pixel-level brightness changes instead of ...
We present a method that leverages the complementarity of event cameras and standard cameras to trac...
In contrast to traditional cameras, whose pixels have a common exposure time, event-based cameras ar...
Event cameras are bio-inspired sensors that differ from conventional frame cameras: Instead of captu...
Event cameras are vision sensors that record asynchronous streams of per-pixel brightness changes, r...
Event cameras, such as the Dynamic Vision Sensor (DVS), are bio-inspired vision sensors that output ...
Event-based cameras have an incredible potential in real-time and real-world robotics. They would en...
Event cameras are novel sensors that output brightness changes in the form of a stream of asynchrono...
Event cameras are novel sensors that report brightness changes in the form of asynchronous “events” ...
Event cameras are novel vision sensors that output pixel-level brightness changes ("events") instead...
Event cameras are novel bio-inspired sensors which mimic the function of the human retina. Rather th...
Traditional frame-based cameras have become the de facto sensor of choice for a multitude of applica...
Event cameras are novel bio-inspired sensors which mimic the function of the human retina. Rather th...
Event cameras are bio-inspired sensors that differ from conventional frame cameras: Instead of captu...
We present a unifying framework to solve several computer vision problems with event cameras: motion...
Event cameras are bio-inspired vision sensors that output pixel-level brightness changes instead of ...
We present a method that leverages the complementarity of event cameras and standard cameras to trac...
In contrast to traditional cameras, whose pixels have a common exposure time, event-based cameras ar...
Event cameras are bio-inspired sensors that differ from conventional frame cameras: Instead of captu...
Event cameras are vision sensors that record asynchronous streams of per-pixel brightness changes, r...
Event cameras, such as the Dynamic Vision Sensor (DVS), are bio-inspired vision sensors that output ...
Event-based cameras have an incredible potential in real-time and real-world robotics. They would en...
Event cameras are novel sensors that output brightness changes in the form of a stream of asynchrono...
Event cameras are novel sensors that report brightness changes in the form of asynchronous “events” ...