[Leapfrog: First Look]
Embedded Algorithms Enable Low-Cost Cell-Phone Zooming
Roger Allan
ED Online ID #18774
May 8, 2008
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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Digital cameras, by themselves and
in cell phones, represent one of the
hottest segments of the consumer
market. To compete, designers need
to lower their costs while improving performance.
Tessera Israel achieves these goals as well as better
reliability with software algorithms that eliminate the need
for conventional mechanical zooming.
The company’s OptiML Zoom uses optical distortion
to zoom in on an image with up to 3X magnification. This
solution also provides more image light and a greater
depth of field. And, its unique lens design costs about as
much as a regular camera lens to manufacture, according
to Tessera.
“The only additional cost, which is minor, is embedding
our algorithms in the camera’s image pipeline that already
exists,” explains Evan Kali, vice president of marketing for
Tessera’s Smart Optics Division.
Two versions of the OptiML Zoom capability are available.
Designed for low-value zoom applications, the first is
based on a fixed-focus lens distortion that provides variable
magnification across the image sensor, high magnification
at the image sensor, and low magnification at the
image border. The second involves a dual-state assembly
and a lens with distortion to provide high-value zooming.
In both cases, digital restoration corrects the distortion of
the captured image.
“Think of our approach by looking at a typical fisheye
lens in which the sharpest image is at the center of the
lens and the periphery portions of the view are not as
sharp,” Kali says. “What we do is over-sample the image
information in the periphery to increase resolution in the
center, and we achieve this with a significant performance
advantage compared to the most advanced digital zooming
techniques in use today.”
“We
believe that the OptiML Zoom solution
meets the growing demand for better
functionality in camera phones, providing
an
optimal combination of price, performance,
size, and ease of integration,” says Michael Berezuik,
Tessera’s chief operating officer.
POINT SPREAD FUNCTION
OptiML Zoom accomplishes optical zooming without any
moving parts via controlled distortion of the image in an
optical system that matches the point spread function
(PSF) to the pixel size over the whole sensor area, exploiting
the interaction between the PSF of an optical system
and the quantized resolution of a solid-state imager. The
PSF describes the response of an imaging system to a
point source or point object
The solution is based on unique fixed-focus optics that
provide magnification in the center of an image’s field of
view with respect to the image’s borders. The distorted image is magnified in the center and
compressed near its borders. The central
region of the image occupies more
of the sensor area, while the image borders
occupy less, compared to a standard
imaging system (see the figure).
The controlled distortion ensures
that the PSF becomes smaller in the
border area, compared to the PSF
provided by a standard lens module.
Consequently, the PSF is spread over
a smaller number of sensor pixels. If
the PSF is designed to have a region
of support of a single pixel, no image
information is lost.
Consider the center of a viewed
object’s field of view, where the image
is magnified to the point where the
resulting PSF size is also about one
pixel. Once again, no loss of information
occurs, since the sensor pixel size
has dictated the image resolution in this
region from the beginning.
Therefore, the optical distortion can
be seen as a magnification mapping
of the PSF size to match the pixel size
in the whole field-of-view region. This
condition is optimal since no information
loss occurs due to under-sampling
and no detail is lost through oversampling.
Essentially, the information
that’s contained in the captured image
is maximal.
DIGITAL CORRECTION
Available for licensing, OptiML Zoom
is part of Tessera’s portfolio of imageenhancement
solutions. The company
already has announced its OptiML
ultra-fast lens (UFL) capability (see
“Unique Technology Boosts Image
Quality Of Low-Cost Cameras,” Electronic
Design, April 24, 2008, ED
Online 18607).
TESSERA INC.
www.tessera.com
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