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Event-cameras have emerged as a revolutionary technology with a high temporal resolution that far surpasses standard active pixel cameras. This technology draws biological inspiration from photoreceptors and the initial retinal synapse. This research showcases the potential of additional retinal functionalities to extract visual features. We provide a domain-agnostic and efficient algorithm for ego-motion compensation based on Object Motion Sensitivity (OMS), one of the multiple features computed within the mammalian retina. We develop a method based on experimental neuroscience that translates OMS’ biological circuitry to a low-overhead algorithm to suppress camera motion bypassing the need for deep networks and learning. Our system processes event data from dynamic scenes to perform pixel-wise object motion segmentation using a real and synthetic dataset. This paper introduces a bio-inspired computer vision method that dramatically reduces the number of parameters by 10^3 to 10^6 orders of magnitude compared to previous approaches. Our work paves the way for robust, high-speed, and low-bandwidth decision-making for in-sensor computations.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 25, 2026
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In parallel with the continuously increasing parameter space dimensionality, search and optimization algorithms should support distributed parameter evaluations to reduce cumulative runtime. Intel’s neuromorphic optimization library, Lava-Optimization, was introduced as an abstract optimization system compatible with neuromorphic systems developed in the broader Lava software framework. In this work, we introduce Lava Multi-Agent Optimization (LMAO) with native support for distributed parameter evaluations communicating with a central Bayesian optimization system. LMAO provides an abstract framework for deploying distributed optimization and search algorithms within the Lava software framework. Moreover, LMAO introduces support for random and grid search along with process connections across multiple levels of mathematical precision. We evaluate the algorithmic performance of LMAO with a traditional non-convex optimization problem, a fixed-precision transductive spiking graph neural network for citation graph classification, and a neuromorphic satellite scheduling problem. Our results highlight LMAO’s efficient scaling to multiple processes, reducing cumulative runtime and minimizing the likelihood of converging to local optima.more » « less
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Recent advances in retinal neuroscience have fueled various hardware and algorithmic efforts to develop retina- inspired solutions for computer vision tasks. In this work, we focus on a fundamental visual feature within the mammalian retina, Object Motion Sensitivity (OMS). Using DVS data from EV-IMO dataset, we analyze the performance of an algorithmic implementation of OMS circuitry for motion segmentation in presence of ego-motion. This holistic analysis considers the underlying constraints arising from the hardware circuit implementation. We present novel CMOS circuits that implement OMS functionality inside image sensors, while providing run-time re-configurability for key algorithmic parameters. In-sensor technologies for dynamical environment adaptation are crucial for ensuring high system performance. Finally, we verify the functionality and re-configurability of the proposed CMOS circuit designs through Cadence simulations in 180nm technology. In summary, the presented work lays foundation for hardware- algorithm re-engineering of known biological circuits to suit application needs.more » « less
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