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  2. Keyence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keyence

    Keyence Corporation (キーエンス, Kīensu) is a Japan-based direct sales organization that develops and manufactures equipment and solutions for factory automation, sensors, measuring instruments, vision systems, barcode readers, laser markers and digital microscopes.

  3. Vision-guided robot systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vision-guided_robot_systems

    Camera lens for machine vision. A vision system comprises a camera and microprocessor or computer, with associated software. This is a very wide definition that can be used to cover many different types of systems which aim to solve a large variety of different tasks. Vision systems can be implemented in virtually any industry for any purpose.

  4. Machine vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machine_vision

    Machine vision is the technology and methods used to provide imaging-based automatic inspection and analysis for such applications as automatic inspection, process control, and robot guidance, usually in industry. Machine vision refers to many technologies, software and hardware products, integrated systems, actions, methods and expertise.

  5. Telecentric lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telecentric_lens

    A bi-telecentric lens is afocal (a system without focus) as the image of an object at infinity formed by the first part of the lens is collimated by the second part. Commercial bi-telecentric lenses are often optimized for very low image distortion and field curvature for accurate measurements across the entire field of view at great resolution ...

  6. CoaXPress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CoaXPress

    CoaXPress (CXP) is a digital interface standard developed for high-speed image data transmission in machine vision applications. The name is a portmanteau of 'express' and 'coaxial' to emphasize CoaXPress is faster than other standards (e.g. Camera Link or GigE Vision) and uses 75 ohm coaxial cables as the physical transmission medium.

  7. Hand–eye calibration problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hand–eye_calibration_problem

    In robotics and mathematics, the hand–eye calibration problem (also called the robot–sensor or robot–world calibration problem) is the problem of determining the transformation between a robot end-effector and a sensor or sensors (camera or laser scanner) or between a robot base and the world coordinate system. [1]

  8. Takemitsu Takizaki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takemitsu_Takizaki

    Takemitsu Takizaki (born 10 June 1945) is a Japanese billionaire businessman, honorary chairman and founder of Keyence, a Japanese manufacturer of automation sensors, vision systems, barcode readers, laser markers, measuring instruments, and digital microscopes.

  9. Automated optical inspection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automated_optical_inspection

    An Automated Optical Inspection device. Automated optical inspection (AOI) is an automated visual inspection of printed circuit board (PCB) (or LCD, transistor) manufacture where a camera autonomously scans the device under test for both catastrophic failure (e.g. missing component) and quality defects (e.g. fillet size or shape or component skew).