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FPGA acceleration of a cortical and a matched filter-based algorithm

Posted on:2009-09-09Degree:M.SType:Thesis
University:Clemson UniversityCandidate:Rice, Kenneth LeeFull Text:PDF
GTID:2448390002994609Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
Digital image processing is a widely used and diverse field. It is used in a broad array of areas such as tracking and detection, object avoidance, computer vision, and numerous other applications. For many image processing tasks, the computations can become time consuming. Therefore, a means for accelerating the computations would be beneficial. Using that as motivation, this thesis examines the acceleration of two distinctly different image processing applications. The first image processing application examined is a recent neocortex inspired cognitive model geared towards pattern recognition as seen in the visual cortex. For this model, both software and reconfigurable logic based FPGA implementations of the model are examined on a Cray XD1. Results indicate that hardware-acceleration can provide average throughput gains of 75 times over software-only implementations of the networks examined when utilizing the full resources of the Cray XD1. The second image processing application examined is matched filter-based position detection. This approach is at the heart of the automatic alignment algorithm currently being tested in the National Ignition Faculty presently under construction at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. To reduce the processing time of the matched filtering, a reconfigurable logic architecture was developed. Results show that the reconfigurable logic architecture provides a speedup of approximately 253 times over an optimized software implementation.
Keywords/Search Tags:Image processing, Reconfigurable logic, Matched
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