If you unlocked your smartphone with a glance today, you’ve tapped into computer vision. Simply put, computer vision entails training computers to “recognize” objects visually—everything from human ...
Object detection is the task of identifying and localising instances of predefined object classes within images or video frames. Early approaches relied on handcrafted features and sliding-window ...
Given computer vision’s place as the cornerstone of an increasing number of applications from ADAS to medical diagnosis and robotics, it is critical that its weak points be mitigated, such as the ...
Shared micromobility giant Lime is finally bringing on some of its own city-appeasing advanced rider assistance system (ARAS) technology. At a Lime event in Paris, the startup shared plans to pilot an ...
Computer vision could be a lot faster and better if we skip the concept of still frames and instead directly analyze the data stream from a camera. At least, that’s the theory that the newest ...
What if you could teach a computer to recognize a zebra without ever showing it one? Imagine a world where object detection isn’t bound by the limits of endless training data or high-powered hardware.
Computer vision has been slipping into industrial work little by little. It didn’t arrive with a big announcement. People just started noticing that some tasks were now handled by cameras instead of ...
Phil Goldstein is a former web editor of the CDW family of tech magazines and a veteran technology journalist. He lives in Washington, D.C., with his wife and their animals: a dog named Brenna, and ...