The present invention relates to a camera-equipped cellular terminal configured to receive visible light communication.
Cellular phones are a key element supporting Japan's industries today. 70 million cellular phone units are being used in Japan. The cellular phone terminal does not only function as a telephone, but includes an infrared data reader and a camera to take pictures, and may even recognize images. Furthermore, having an RF-ID tag is becoming more frequent. Possession of a cellular terminal is equivalent to having a credit card, and even an identification card in some cases. The cellular terminal takes the market position of personal computers of the 1990s. In this state, cameras have a function of receiving external visible images and are widely prevalent. A system including a cellular terminal, which extracts information from a communication device (e.g., a communication device configured to modulate at a high speed an LED used for displaying or lighting an emergency light or advertising light) using visible light by expanding such function of a camera, is made experimentally, as in
In the case of
The image provided from the camera 21 is displayed on the display 22 of the cellular terminal 22. While an image 23 of the visible light communication device such as an emergency light taken by the camera is displayed, the image taken by the camera is sampled at high speed when a button of the cellular terminal 20 is pushed so as to instruct to receive visible light communication, allowing demodulation of the modulated visible light, and resulting in provision of information from the illuminative light.
However, the camera used for visible light communication needs a high-speed sampling frequency, and is thus of a special type. This is an excessive specification as camera's functions and is thus expensive.
When using a typical camera for visible light communication, information transfer speed for visible light communication is limited due to a low-speed sampling frequency.
Note that Non-patent Document 1 should be referred for detection of information sent through visible light communication using a digital camera.
[Non-patent Document 1]
Matsushita, Nobuyuki et al, ‘ID Cam: Smart Camera Capable of Photographing Scenes and IDs Simultaneously’ Information Processing Society of Japan Journal Vol. 43 No. 6, pp. 3664-3674, (2002-12)
Problem to be Solved by the Invention
The objective of the present invention is to provide a camera-equipped cellular terminal capable of visible light communication without using a camera having fast sampling speed.
Means for Solving the Problem
In order to achieve the above-given objective of the present invention, a camera attached cellular terminal according to the present invention includes a visible light receiving unit provided separate from the camera, which receives visible light information.
The light receiving unit is deployed pointing in the same direction as the camera lens of the cellular terminal, and may be configured so as to receive visible light communication when a device sending information through the visible light is portrayed in the display.
[Effects of the Invention]
Provision of the light receiving unit for visible light communication in addition to the camera allows high-speed reception of information through the visible light communication without any constraints for the camera.
Furthermore, when the camera is used as a finder to display, the light receiving unit may receive information through the visible light communication.
An embodiment of the present invention is described using the appended drawings.
As shown in
The structures shown in
Conventionally, since information sent through visible light communication has been captured by a camera attached to a cellular terminal, the need for replacing that camera with one with an especially fast sampling speed occurs. The structure of
Moreover, by setting the camera and the light receiving unit to point in the same direction and displaying an illuminating device, which conducts visible light communication, on the camera display using the camera as a finder, whether the light receiving unit can receive information through visible light communication is determined. It is sufficient for the light receiving unit 24 for visible light communication to only detect light intensity. Therefore, as long as the picture of the visible light communication device taken by the camera is portrayed in the center of the screen, setting so that information resulting from modulating and transmitting illuminative light can be detected becomes easier.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-026067 | Feb 2004 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP05/01383 | 2/1/2005 | WO | 5/22/2007 |