SnapPix: Efficient-Coding--Inspired In-Sensor Compression for Edge Vision
Abstract
Energy-efficient image acquisition on the edge is crucial for enabling remote sensing applications where the sensor node has weak compute capabilities and must transmit data to a remote server/cloud for processing. To reduce the edge energy consumption, this paper proposes a sensor-algorithm co-designed system called SnapPix, which compresses raw pixels in the analog domain inside the sensor. We use coded exposure (CE) as the in-sensor compression strategy as it offers the flexibility to sample, i.e., selectively expose pixels, both spatially and temporally. SNAPPIX has three contributions. First, we propose a task-agnostic strategy to learn the sampling/exposure pattern based on the classic theory of efficient coding. Second, we co-design the downstream vision model with the exposure pattern to address the pixel-level non-uniformity unique to CE-compressed images. Finally, we propose lightweight augmentations to the image sensor hardware to support our in-sensor CE compression. Evaluating on action recognition and video reconstruction, SnapPix outperforms state-of-the-art video-based methods at the same speed while reducing the energy by up to 15.4x. We have open-sourced the code at: https://github.com/horizon-research/SnapPix.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2504.04535,
title = {SnapPix: Efficient-Coding--Inspired In-Sensor Compression for Edge Vision},
author = {Weikai Lin and Tianrui Ma and Adith Boloor and Yu Feng and Ruofan Xing and Xuan Zhang and Yuhao Zhu},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.04535},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
7 pages, Accepted to Design Automation Conference (DAC), 2025