Tradition & Technology: A New Era of Biodiversity Manageme...
Harnessing Science for Ecosystem Protection Canada, with its immense ecological diversity, from A...

The phenomenon that makes machines such as computers or mobile phones see the surroundings is known as Computer Vision. Serious work on re-creating a human eye started way back in the 50s and since then, we have come a long way. Computer vision has already made its way to our mobile phones via different e-commerce or camera apps.

Working on Computer Vision is equivalent to working on millions of calculations in the blink of an eye with almost the same accuracy as that of a human eye. It is not just about converting a picture into pixels and then trying to make sense of what’s in the picture through those pixels, you will have to first understand the bigger picture of how to extract information from those pixels and understand what they represent.
From the improvement of performances of deep learning neural networks in 2012, computer vision nowadays is mostly involved in discussions of deep learning. With the power of deep learning, computer vision has already penetrated into our daily lives.
For example, face recognition algorithms were used across the globe for phone unlock. In the future, there will be more ground-breaking implementations that will affect the world.
Linge Xie – SR&ED Consultant
Explore our latest insights
More arrow_forward
Harnessing Science for Ecosystem Protection Canada, with its immense ecological diversity, from A...

The Canadian mining sector is transforming. Automation, electrification, and real-time data integ...

The race toward cleaner, more efficient transportation has accelerated research into lighter, sma...

The Scientific Research & Experimental Development (SR&ED) program is one of Canada’...