- cross-posted to:
- jingszo
- cross-posted to:
- jingszo
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The processors made for running deep neural networks (Graphics Processing Units, GPUs) consume a substantial amount of energy.
In an article published in Science Robotics on May 15, 2024, researchers from Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands, demonstrate for the first time a drone that uses neuromorphic vision and control for autonomous flight.
Specifically, they developed a spiking neural network that processes the signals from a neuromorphic camera and outputs control commands that determine the drone’s pose and thrust.
Over the generations of the artificial evolution, the spiking neural networks got increasingly good at control, and were finally able to fly in any direction at different speeds.
It can even fly with flickering lights, which make the pixels in the neuromorphic camera send great numbers of signals to the network that are unrelated to motion.
At Delft University of Technology’s Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, we work on tiny autonomous drones which can be used for applications ranging from monitoring crop in greenhouses to keeping track of stock in warehouses.
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