farjamit@eecs.cs.pdx.edu (Tom Farjami) (04/07/91)
Greatings, I am working on design and fabrication of a CMOS motion detector IC that I have classified as being fuzzy. The fol- lowing is a description of the circuit. It has 10 digital inputs and a final output. A strong voltage on the output (near VDD) means that majority of the inputs were fired in the preferred direction, otherwise output is silent. There is no feedbacks and therefor no neural-net like back props in this circuit. It detects motion in real time; as long as input signal is within few hundred to few kilo hertz. Cir- cuit is biologically motivated and operates in subthreshold. I have the following question,"Basically what are some of the applications of this circuit in real life ?". I have thought of waveform detection in scopes, pattern recognition and even speech recognition myself. How would that be?. Consider the following. If inputs of the motion detector came from a set of comparators such that all of the compara- tors were comparing the same analog input signal( say a speech signal) against a constant (programmable) voltages. That is each comparator has a different reference voltage but takes in the same analog signal as other comparators do. Now if the analog waveform matched the wright pattern in the preferred direction ( which is basically what you programmed the comparators with), motion detector will turn on and we have pattern detection. Ofcourse for this I need more that 10 inputs, perhaps hundreds to give me high resolution and a state machine plus a A/D converter to program my reference voltages; but this can be. I especially like to hear comments from those doing speech and pattern recognition. Regards, Tom Farjami Portland State University April 6, 1991 -- =========================== MODERATOR ============================== Steve Stevenson {steve,fpst}@hubcap.clemson.edu Department of Computer Science, comp.parallel Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634-1906 (803)656-5880.mabell