Low-Power Computer Vision: Status, Challenges, Opportunities
Sergei Alyamkin, Matthew Ardi, Alexander C. Berg, Achille Brighton, Bo Chen, Yiran Chen, Hsin-Pai Cheng, Zichen Fan, Chen Feng, Bo Fu, Kent Gauen, Abhinav Goel, Alexander Goncharenko, Xuyang Guo, Soonhoi Ha, Andrew Howard, Xiao Hu, Yuanjun Huang, Donghyun Kang, Jaeyoun Kim
- Year
- 2019
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Computer vision has achieved impressive progress in recent years. Meanwhile, mobile phones have become the primary computing platforms for millions of people. In addition to mobile phones, many autonomous systems rely on visual data for making decisions and some of these systems have limited energy (such as unmanned aerial vehicles also called drones and mobile robots). These systems rely on batteries and energy efficiency is critical. This article serves two main purposes: (1) Examine the state-of-the-art for low-power solutions to detect objects in images. Since 2015, the IEEE Annual International Low-Power Image Recognition Challenge (LPIRC) has been held to identify the most energy-efficient computer vision solutions. This article summarizes 2018 winners' solutions. (2) Suggest directions for research as well as opportunities for low-power computer vision.
Keywords
Related papers
How to Relieve Distribution Shifts in Semantic Segmentation for Off-Road Environments
Ji-Hoon Hwang, Daeyoung Kim, Hyung-Suk Yoon +2 more
2026
Uncertainty-guided evolvable recognition framework for industrial robots via prototype-based fuzzy inference and evidence fusion
Yanrun Zhou, Zihao Lei, Guangrui Wen +4 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Point cloud registration for non-destructive, high-resolution coating thickness measurement from 3D scans
Simon Duenser, Ivo Aschwanden, Raamadaas Krishnadas +2 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Toward the intelligent robotics era: Multimodal flexible haptic sensors for advanced perception systems
Sili Ding, Feng Xu, Jie Chen +3 more
Progress in Materials Science · 2026