iMav
The Devil's Advocate
Software for multicore computers could add resolution to video in real time
Intel's super-resolution research is part of the company's push to find the best applications to run on its multicore machines, says Jerry Bautista, codirector of Intel's tera-scale computing research program. While multicore computers--machines with more than one processing core--are currently available to consumers in dual- and quad-core varieties, Intel has a research-grade microprocessor with 80 cores. (See "The Promise of Personal Supercomputing.") And as researchers get closer to their goal of achieving tera-scale computing on desktop computers--in which trillions of calculations per second are enabled by massively multicore systems--the company is ramping up its software research; improving video quality using multicore machines is one of the top priorities on Intel's to-do list, says Bautista.
To be sure, the chip maker isn't the first to explore the idea of adding resolution to video. Super-resolution theory dates back to the 1980s, says Peyman Milanfar, a professor of electrical engineering at the University of California, Santa Cruz. But in the early days, the algorithms just didn't work well, and the computing power wasn't there to process the videos quickly. In 2003, Milanfar and his group developed computationally efficient algorithms that were able to improve the resolution for most video, although not in real time. Indeed, Milanfar's approach has been the basis of other research by academics and companies.
Super-resolution algorithms upgrade video in two main steps, explains Oscar Nestares, senior research scientist at Intel. First, the algorithm examines pixels in the video frames to see how fast each pixel is moving and in which direction. For instance, if a car is moving down a street, the pixels that compose it will all be moving in a predictable way.
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Researchers at Intel have developed an algorithm that, by leveraging the power of multiple microprocessors, can boost the resolution of a video as it plays in real time. The technology, called super resolution, can run on machines with as few as two cores and as many as hundreds, potentially letting people enhance video captured with a cheap webcam, improve old home movies, or turn a DVD-quality video into a high-resolution flick.Intel’s new algorithm, which leverages multicore architecture, can improve the resolution of video in real time.
Intel's super-resolution research is part of the company's push to find the best applications to run on its multicore machines, says Jerry Bautista, codirector of Intel's tera-scale computing research program. While multicore computers--machines with more than one processing core--are currently available to consumers in dual- and quad-core varieties, Intel has a research-grade microprocessor with 80 cores. (See "The Promise of Personal Supercomputing.") And as researchers get closer to their goal of achieving tera-scale computing on desktop computers--in which trillions of calculations per second are enabled by massively multicore systems--the company is ramping up its software research; improving video quality using multicore machines is one of the top priorities on Intel's to-do list, says Bautista.
To be sure, the chip maker isn't the first to explore the idea of adding resolution to video. Super-resolution theory dates back to the 1980s, says Peyman Milanfar, a professor of electrical engineering at the University of California, Santa Cruz. But in the early days, the algorithms just didn't work well, and the computing power wasn't there to process the videos quickly. In 2003, Milanfar and his group developed computationally efficient algorithms that were able to improve the resolution for most video, although not in real time. Indeed, Milanfar's approach has been the basis of other research by academics and companies.
Super-resolution algorithms upgrade video in two main steps, explains Oscar Nestares, senior research scientist at Intel. First, the algorithm examines pixels in the video frames to see how fast each pixel is moving and in which direction. For instance, if a car is moving down a street, the pixels that compose it will all be moving in a predictable way.
Full Article