Published: 3 Aug 07 - 0:00
Experts in the field of image processing,
such as Siemens, Frost & Sullivan, the
German Engineering Federation and people from
the German Fraunhofer Allianz, all agree that
there are very promising trends towards three-
dimensional imaging, texture analysis,
high-speed cameras, colour recognition and
thermography.
Looking at the not-so-distant horizon, we
will see the greatest amount of innovation in
data processing, recognition software and
optical resolution performance.
Image-processing applications already range from
industrial uses and security systems to
transport-ation and medical technology. Industry
experts, however, agree that only about 20% of
all possible applications have been addressed so
far. Siemens ‘Pictures of the Future Fall
2006’ stresses that, according to estimates
provided by a number of manufacturers, the
worldwide market volume for machine vision
systems currently amounts to about
€6,5-billion, with annual growth rates
extending into the double-digit range.
In the industrial area, image-processing
systems are employed for quality control in
virtually every sector. They are used to inspect
everything – from computer displays and the
surfaces of gearbox components to printed
circuit boards for cellphones. Image processing
is also useful in metrology, where it is used in
visually guided machines and to recognise
components, symbolic characters and codes.
Cameras can help robots recognise objects, such
as the shape and position of workpieces.
In Germany, industrial image processing has
been growing faster than other sectors of
automation technology for several years and the
growth rate was about 9% in 2006.
According to a study by Frost & Sullivan,
the market will see increasing growth in sales
of gigabit Ethernet cameras that can transmit
high-resolution images from a camera to a
computer across a distasnce of several hundred
metres. In 2007, three-dimensional vision
systems for robots are available, together with
systems for the inspection of semiconductor
components with an accuracy of 4,5 u.
Starting in 2010, smart cameras with neural
networks are expected to have the capability of
categorising objects into many different classes
– an important feature when it comes to
automatic sorting.
Image processing
Image processing is vitally impor-tant in
hospitals too. According to Frost &
Sullivan, the key development in that sector is
the growing importance of picture archiving and
communication systems, which make it possible to
process, store and manage medical images, and
have become accepted as the standard in
radiology. By 2010, analysts predicct sales in
Europe will reach $1,47-billion – compared
with $0,47-billion in 2003. An important growth
engine here is a reduction in costs, which are
declining by about 10% annually. Another trend
is the combination of two imaging modalities in
a single system, such as high- resolution
computed tomography images paired with nuclear
medicine methods that visualise biochemical
processes.
In the auto industry too, image processing for
driver assistance systems is gaining in
importance and automakers use not only laser,
radar and ultrasonic sensors, but also cameras
that can perceive vehicles, lane boundaries,
traffic signs and pedestrians faster than the
human eye. It is predicted that cameras will
experience the strongest sales growth among all
onboard automotive sensing systems, for
instance, in video-supported systems that sense
lane markers and issue a warning when a car
strays from its lane, and in parking-assistance
systems.
The authors of the European Union study, ‘UrbanEye’,
estimate that there are more than four-million
private and public survaillance cameras in
Europe. About 6 000 cameras of the estimated 500
000 cameras installed throughout London are
located in the city’s underground system. In
some streets, cameras are mounted only 15 m
apart. Privacy advocates have calculated that
people in London are recorded by a surveillance
camera up to 300 times a day. But most Londoners
consider the undeniable successes in fighting
crime more important than the potential negative
aspects of such monitoring.
In the ‘UrbanEye’ survey, 90% of
London’s inhabitants were in favour of cameras
in public places (compared with 25% in Vienna,
Austria). In New York too, cameras are
multiplying rapidly. In Manhattan, for instance,
there are already 9 000 cameras in public places
– about four for each city block.
In the past, such systems used cameras that
merely trans-mitted their images to tape
machines and monitors.
But now there are more and more digital
cameras that transmit data to computers. Cur-rently,
four to eight such cameras share one central
processing unit (CPU). But in just two to three
years, many cameras will have their own CPUs.
Con- ventional video tape will be super- fluous.
Using intelligent software, the latest smart
cameras can even use data comparison to detect
unusual behaviour and trigger an alarm.
Future developments
By 2008, video cameras will be increasingly
combined with access-control solutions. That, in
turn, will increase demand for biometric
systems, especially those based on face
recognition.
Market researchers also see a particularly
strong future trend towards totally digital
solutions based on the Internet Protocol. Every
survaillance camera will then essentially be a
webcam. What’s more, security personnel will
increasingly be able to use mobile telphones to
record and transmit the actions of suspicious
persons for computer analysis, for instance, in
airports, railway stations and sports arenas.