Computer Engineering
Year
2018
Sponsor
Oakley Lab

There is currently no effective way to quantify courtship patterns among ostracods (tiny crustaceans that produce luminous courtship displays throughout the Caribbean). Waterborne Autonomous Low Light Electrostereovideography (WALL-E), is a submersible low-light camera that can be deployed in tandem to analyze these courtship patterns using computer vision techniques. This capstone project will develop a system with the following features:

● waterproof stereo camera setup with the ability to record onto an SD card for further analysis

● GPS to retrieve location and time information

● post-processing computer vision pipeline to create 3D map of ostracod light pulses in real time

Files
Image Gallery
Eyes LCD Demo PCB PCB Schematic Vincent Working Wall-E

Students

Computer Engineering
Computer Engineering
Computer Engineering
Computer Engineering
Computer Engineering
Computer Engineering