Title :
Assessment of hardware vs software implementations for video microscopy
Author :
Prasad, Brinda ; Badawy, Wael
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Engg, Calgary Univ., Calgary, AB
fDate :
Nov. 29 2006-Dec. 1 2006
Abstract :
Video microscopic platforms have been developed to capture cell dynamics, such as cell velocity, in real-time to quantify and usefully leverage the electro kinetic response of cells to electric fields. The first and critical task in a cell motion detection algorithm is the computationally demanding segmentation process, where a static cell boundary aids grouping the cell regions and thereby identifying the cell. We propose the use of dedicated hardware to increase the speed and efficiency of operation and the computational effort involved in the segmentation process. This dedicated hardware is compared to a software program executed on a general purpose processor to ascertain the relevance of the proposed hardware. The hardware design is verified on a FPGA to implement the cell segmentation architecture, modelled in Verilog and synthesized using QuartusII Altera Stratix device. The segmentation results presented shows relevant design statistics demonstrating equivalent cell identification performance, however, with a computational speed-up of ~5 times compared to the software based approach.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biological effects of fields; biomedical electronics; biomedical optical imaging; cellular biophysics; field programmable gate arrays; image segmentation; medical image processing; optical microscopy; FPGA; QuartusII Altera Stratix device; Verilog; cell dynamics; cell identification; cell motion detection algorithm; cell segmentation process; cell velocity; electro kinetic response; static cell boundary; video microscopy; Computer architecture; Field programmable gate arrays; Hardware design languages; Microscopy; Motion analysis; Motion detection; Software performance; Statistics; Tracking; Video sequences;
Conference_Titel :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems Conference, 2006. BioCAS 2006. IEEE
Conference_Location :
London
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-0436-0
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-0437-7
DOI :
10.1109/BIOCAS.2006.4600330