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National Instruments Announces Module for Camera Link FPGA Image Processing

NEWS RELEASE – June 7, 2010 – National Instruments today announced the  release of a new vision module for the PXI platform that provides a high-performance parallel  processing architecture for hardware-defined timing, control and image  pre-processing. The new NI 1483 Camera Link adapter module, in combination with  an NI FlexRIO field-programmable gate array (FPGA) board, offers a solution  for embedding vision and control algorithms directly on FPGAs. Engineers and  scientists can use FPGAs to process and analyze an image in real time with  little to no CPU intervention. Additionally, using FPGAs helps eliminate the  need to design custom hardware.

"We see the speed and flexibility of  FPGAs as a crucial technology to perform intensive image processing at high  speeds," said James Cotton, a graduate researcher in neuroscience at Baylor  College of Medicine. "NI LabVIEW FPGA graphical programming tools along with NI  FlexRIO FPGA hardware for PXI technology, allowed us to quickly develop a high  quality eye tracking solution that can resolve fixation position to within  tenths of a degree at up to 500 Hz.”

Engineers and scientists can use  FPGAs to perform operations by pixel, line and region of interest. The FPGAs can  implement many image processing algorithms that are inherently parallel,  including fast Fourier transforms (FFTs), thresholding and filtering. The NI  1483 is ideal for optical coherence tomography (OCT) and high-speed control  systems for applications such as laser alignment and sorting. The module is also  suitable for acquisition from Camera Link devices with custom tap configurations  and high-resolution sensors measuring more than 10 megapixels (MP) requiring  hardware-based pre-processing.

The new module supports base-, medium-  and full-configuration Camera Link devices as well as 80-bit 10-tap  configurations, all up to 85MHz. This design gives engineers and scientists the  ability to customize the image acquisition when using custom image sensors. The  85MHz measurement supports the Camera Link standardized specification to its  fullest, creating an excellent fit for those working on applications with high  frame rates. The module also integrates several I/O options including four TTL  I/O lines, two opto-isolated inputs and one quadrature encoder input in addition  to the many modular I/O and industrial communication options available for the  PXI platform. Engineers and scientists can customize the NI FlexRIO hardware  using the LabVIEW FPGA  Module without knowledge of low-level hardware description languages  or board-level design. By using the LabVIEW graphical programming environment,  engineers and scientists vastly reduce their development time while making use  of existing VHDL IP.

Readers can view the FPGA  vision white paper on www.ni.com to learn more about the NI-1483 Camera Link  Adaptor Module. 

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