Emergent Mind

Abstract

Imaging systems are increasingly used as input to convolutional neural networks (CNN) for object detection; we would like to design cameras that are optimized for this purpose. It is impractical to build different cameras and then acquire and label the necessary data for every potential camera design; creating software simulations of the camera in context (soft prototyping) is the only realistic approach. We implemented soft-prototyping tools that can quantitatively simulate image radiance and camera designs to create realistic images that are input to a convolutional neural network for car detection. We used these methods to quantify the effect that critical hardware components (pixel size), sensor control (exposure algorithms) and image processing (gamma and demosaicing algorithms) have upon average precision of car detection. We quantify (a) the relationship between pixel size and the ability to detect cars at different distances, (b) the penalty for choosing a poor exposure duration, and (c) the ability of the CNN to perform car detection for a variety of post-acquisition processing algorithms. These results show that the optimal choices for car detection are not constrained by the same metrics used for image quality in consumer photography. It is better to evaluate camera designs for CNN applications using soft prototyping with task-specific metrics rather than consumer photography metrics.

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