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Article
2018 Low-Power Image Recognition Challenge
ArXiv
  • George K. Thiruvathukal, Loyola University Chicago
Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
10-1-2018
Disciplines
Abstract

The Low-Power Image Recognition Challenge (LPIRC, this https URL) is an annual competition started in 2015. The competition identifies the best technologies that can classify and detect objects in images efficiently (short execution time and low energy consumption) and accurately (high precision). Over the four years, the winners' scores have improved more than 24 times. As computer vision is widely used in many battery-powered systems (such as drones and mobile phones), the need for low-power computer vision will become increasingly important. This paper summarizes LPIRC 2018 by describing the three different tracks and the winners' solutions.

Identifier
arXiv:1810.01732
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0
Citation Information
Sergei Alyamkin, Matthew Ardi, Achille Brighton, Alexander C. Berg, Yiran Chen, Hsin-Pai Cheng, Bo Chen, Zichen Fan, Chen Feng, Bo Fu, Kent Gauen, Jongkook Go, Alexander Goncharenko, Xuyang Guo, Hong Hanh Nguyen, Andrew Howard, Yuanjun Huang, Donghyun Kang, Jaeyoun Kim, Alexander Kondratyev, Seungjae Lee, Suwoong Lee, Junhyeok Lee, Zhiyu Liang, Xin Liu, Juzheng Liu, Zichao Li, Yang Lu, Yung-Hsiang Lu, Deeptanshu Malik, Eunbyung Park, Denis Repin, Tao Sheng, Liang Shen, Fei Sun, David Svitov, George K. Thiruvathukal, Baiwu Zhang, Jingchi Zhang, Xiaopeng Zhang, and Shaojie Zhuo, "2018 Low-Power Image Recognition Challenge", arXiv:1810.01732