Vision by Man and Machine: How the Brain Processes Visual Information may be Suggested by Studies in Computer Vision (and Vice Versa).
Abstract
The development of increasingly sophisticated and powerful computers in the last few decades has frequently stimulated comparisons between them and the human brain. Such comparisons will become more earnest as computers are applied more and more to tasks formerly associated with essentially human activities and capabilities. The expectation of a coming generation of intelligent computers and robots with sensory, motor and even intellectual skills comparable in quality to our own is becoming more widespread and is leading to a new and potentially productive analytical science of information processing. In no field has this new approach been so precisely formulated and so thoroughly exemplified as in the field of vision. As the dominant sensory modality of man, vision is one of the major keys to our mastery of the environment, to our understanding and control of the objects wich surroud us. If we wish to create robots capable of performing complex manipulative tasks in a changing environment, we must surely endow them with (among other things) adequate visual powers. How can we set about designing such flexible and adaptive robots? In designing them, can we make use of our rapidly growing knowledge of the human brain, and if so, how at the same time, can our experience in designing artificial vision systems help us to understand how the brain analyzes visual information?
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Mar 01, 1984
- Accession Number
- ADA147890
Entities
People
- T. Poggio
Organizations
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology