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Distributed Peer-to-Peer Smart Cameras: Algorithms and Architectures
Irvine, California December 12-December 14
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ISM.2005.51Seventh IEEE International Symposium ...
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Wayne Wolf, Princeton University
Advances in VLSI allow us to make cheap cameras and to supply them with powerful processors. To harness these capabilities, we need to move to peer-to-peer networks of smart cameras. Such systems perform distributed video analysis without a central server. Peer-to-peer systems save bandwidth and energy, are cheaper to install, and are more fault-tolerant. The Embedded Systems Group at Princeton University is developing smart cameras and peer-to-peer networks. After describing the application demands, we will briefly describe architectures for embedded real-time video processing in smart cameras. We will then describe video algorithms and network architectures for peer-to-peer gesture recognition and tracking.
Citation:
Wayne Wolf, "Distributed Peer-to-Peer Smart Cameras: Algorithms and Architectures," ism, pp.178, Seventh IEEE International Symposium on Multimedia (ISM'05), 2005
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