IVCVSPDec 25, 2021

Network-Aware 5G Edge Computing for Object Detection: Augmenting Wearables to "See" More, Farther and Faster

arXiv:2112.13194v224 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses the challenge of enabling real-time object detection for navigation in wearables, though it is incremental as it focuses on simulation-based evaluation rather than new methods.

This paper assessed the feasibility of using 5G edge computing to offload object detection processing from a smart wearable for the blind and visually impaired, finding that 5G mmWave connectivity enables real-time performance with high accuracy and range compared to 4G LTE.

Advanced wearable devices are increasingly incorporating high-resolution multi-camera systems. As state-of-the-art neural networks for processing the resulting image data are computationally demanding, there has been growing interest in leveraging fifth generation (5G) wireless connectivity and mobile edge computing for offloading this processing to the cloud. To assess this possibility, this paper presents a detailed simulation and evaluation of 5G wireless offloading for object detection within a powerful, new smart wearable called VIS4ION, for the Blind-and-Visually Impaired (BVI). The current VIS4ION system is an instrumented book-bag with high-resolution cameras, vision processing and haptic and audio feedback. The paper considers uploading the camera data to a mobile edge cloud to perform real-time object detection and transmitting the detection results back to the wearable. To determine the video requirements, the paper evaluates the impact of video bit rate and resolution on object detection accuracy and range. A new street scene dataset with labeled objects relevant to BVI navigation is leveraged for analysis. The vision evaluation is combined with a detailed full-stack wireless network simulation to determine the distribution of throughputs and delays with real navigation paths and ray-tracing from new high-resolution 3D models in an urban environment. For comparison, the wireless simulation considers both a standard 4G-Long Term Evolution (LTE) carrier and high-rate 5G millimeter-wave (mmWave) carrier. The work thus provides a thorough and realistic assessment of edge computing with mmWave connectivity in an application with both high bandwidth and low latency requirements.

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