In a quest for making FPGA technology more accessible to the software community, Xilinx recently released PYNQ, a framework for Zynq that relies on Python and overlays to ease the integration of functionalities of the programmable logic into applications. In this work we build upon this framework to enable transparent hardware acceleration for scientific computations for Zynq. We do so by providing a custom NumPy library designed for PYNQ, as it is the de-facto scientific library for Python. We then demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach on a biomedical use case involving the extraction of features from the Electroencephalography (EEG).
We are losing biodiversity at an unprecedented scale and in many cases, we do not even know the basic data for the species. Traditional methods for wildlife monitoring are inadequate. Development of new computer vision tools enables the use of images as the source of information about wildlife. Social media is the rich source of wildlife images, which come with a huge bias, thus thwarting traditional population size estimate approaches. Here, we present a new framework to take into account the social media bias when using this data source to provide wildlife population size estimates. We show that, surprisingly, this is a learnable and potentially solvable problem.
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