Computational Optical Sensing and Processing Laboratory
The main research challenge of our laboratory is to derive precise abstract information or decisions from large complex noisy topological data sets captured by one or multiple optical sensors. We apply special optical arrangements such as different holographic setups and fluorescent illuminations for microscopic imaging, or multi-spectral camera-based patient monitoring systems or wide-angle multi-camera systems in monitoring. The heavy computational load is handled by many-core processor arrays, such as GPUs in desktop applications or embedded low-power systems.
Publication date
2012
In: 2012 IEEE 15th International Symposium on Design and Diagnostics of Electronic Circuits and Systems, DDECS 2012, Tallinn, 18-20 April 2012, 2012-04-18 - 2012-04-20, Tallinn, Észtország.
Test and configuration architecture of a sub-THz CMOS detector array
In: Results and trends in theoretical computer science. Colloquium in honor of Arto Salomaa. Proceedings. Graz, 1994. (Lecture notes in computer science 812.).
Cooperating grammars' systems: power and parameters
In: 13th International Workshop on Cellular Nanoscale Networks and their Applications (CNNA), Turin, Italy Aug. 29-31, 2012, 2012-08-29 - 2012-08-31, Torino, Olaszország.
Afocal Digital Holographic Microscopy and its Advantages
In: Képfeldolgozók és alakfelismerok 2. konferenciája. (Second conference of the Hungarian Image Processing and Pattern Recognition Society.) Noszvaj, 2000..
Noise estimation and measures for detection of clustered microcalcifications