Paper
6 October 1998 Grating-optical diffractive image preprocessing in optical sensors copying human vision (OPTORETINA)
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Abstract
3D multilayer phase gratings (nuclear layers in the human retina) of oscillating cells positioned in the image plane of a monocular optical imaging system transform light double cones by diffraction and pulsation (quantization) into the reciprocal space behind the grating (Fourier-space in the Fresnel-nearfield). This effect we call OPTORETINA not only guarantees the transformation of the physical stimuli parameters (intensity/wavelength) in the visible spectrum into three chromatically tuned adaptive RGB-color channels (diffraction orders with Brightness-Hue-Saturation aspects) and of object distances in 3D-space into spatial frequencies or temporal phase differences in reciprocal space (the MULTIDIST grating optical sensors developed at CORRSYS).
© (1998) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Norbert Lauinger "Grating-optical diffractive image preprocessing in optical sensors copying human vision (OPTORETINA)", Proc. SPIE 3522, Intelligent Robots and Computer Vision XVII: Algorithms, Techniques, and Active Vision, (6 October 1998); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.325780
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Spatial frequencies

Diffraction gratings

Retina

Diffraction

Modulation

Human vision and color perception

Visualization

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