True 3-D displays for avionics and mission crewstations
Elizabeth A. Sholler, Frederick M. Meyer, et al.
SPIE AeroSense 1997
A parallel digital optical cellular image processor (DOCIP) functionally comprises an array of identical 1-bit processing elements or cells. a fixed interconnection network, and a control unit. Four interconnection network topologies are described. and include two variants of a mesh-connected array and two variants of a cellular hypercube network. The instruction sets of these single-instruction multiple-data (SIMD)machines are based on a mathematical morphological theory, binary image algebra (BIA), which provide an inherently parallel programming structure for their control. Physically, a DOCIP architecture uses a holographic optical element in a 3D free-space optical system to implement off-chip interconnections, and an optoelectronic spatial light modulator to implement a 2D array of nonlinear processing elements and (optionally) local on-chip interconnections. Two examples are given. The first, an experimental implementation of a single 54-gate cell of the DOCIP, uses an optically recorded hologram for within-cell optical interconnections, and a spatial light modulator for a 2D array of optically accessible gates. The second, a design for an efficient and more manufacturable architecture, uses a computer-generated diffractive optical element for cell-to-cell interconnections, and a 2D smart-pixel array of DOCIP cells, each cell having electronic logic and optical input/output. © 1994 IEEE.
Elizabeth A. Sholler, Frederick M. Meyer, et al.
SPIE AeroSense 1997
Thomas R. Puzak, A. Hartstein, et al.
CF 2007
Elliot Linzer, M. Vetterli
Computing
Liqun Chen, Matthias Enzmann, et al.
FC 2005