Seeing like a Cephalopod: Colour Vision with a Monochrome Event Camera
Seeing like a Cephalopod: Colour Vision with a Monochrome Event Camera
Cephalopods exhibit unique colour discrimination capabilities despite having one type of photoreceptor, relying instead on chromatic aberration induced by their ocular optics and pupil shapes to perceive spectral information. We took inspiration from this biological mechanism to design a spectral imaging system that combines a ball lens with an event-based camera. Our approach relies on a motorised system that shifts the focal position, mirroring the adaptive lens motion in cephalopods. This approach has enabled us to achieve wavelength-dependent focusing across the visible light and near-infrared spectrum, making the event a spectral sensor. We characterise chromatic aberration effects, using both event-based and conventional frame-based sensors, validating the effectiveness of bio-inspired spectral discrimination both in simulation and in a real setup as well as assessing the spectral discrimination performance. Our proposed approach provides a robust spectral sensing capability without conventional colour filters or computational demosaicing. This approach opens new pathways toward new spectral sensing systems inspired by nature's evolutionary solutions. Code and analysis are available at: https://samiarja.github.io/neuromorphic_octopus_eye/
Sami Arja、Nimrod Kruger、Alexandre Marcireau、Nicholas Owen Ralph、Saeed Afshar、Gregory Cohen
光电子技术生物科学研究方法、生物科学研究技术
Sami Arja,Nimrod Kruger,Alexandre Marcireau,Nicholas Owen Ralph,Saeed Afshar,Gregory Cohen.Seeing like a Cephalopod: Colour Vision with a Monochrome Event Camera[EB/OL].(2025-04-15)[2025-04-26].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.10984.点此复制
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