A paper detailing this work is published in Nature Methods here.
The BBSRC press release on this research can be found here.
The Isis Innovation product page is here.
Contributors to the original study:
Gil Bub, web, email: gil.bub@dpag.ox.ac.uk
Matthias Tecza web, email: mtecza@astro.ox.ac.uk
Michiel Helmes email: michiel@ionoptix.com
Peter Lee email: peter.lee@dpag.ox.ac.uk
Peter Kohl web, email peter.kohl@dpag.ox.ac.uk
Collaborators on upcoming CMOS developments:
Roger Light web, email roger.light@nottingham.ac.uk
Mark Pitter web, email mark.pitter@nottingham.ac.uk
Mike Somekh web, email mike.somekh@nottingham.ac.uk
Cordin Scientific Imaging web
Upcoming work using structured illumination:
Martyn Reynolds web, email m.reynolds@cairn-research.co.uk
The Press:
There was a very surprising response to the article, with over 50 news and blog items being posted in the span of a few days.
Some are in the box on the right. Favourites so far:
New Scientist,
The Telegraph,
io9,
Slashdot.
Talks:
CMOS Emerging Technologies 2011, Venturefest 2010, Photonex 2009...
Equipment Companies:
The camera used for the research: Prosilica.
We are now using a sensitive cooled camera from Photometrics.
We also have our hands on Raptor Photonics EMCCD cameras.
The DMD array was purchased from Vialux.
Mechanical components: Thorlabs,Newport.
Optical Filters: Chroma.
Lights and other stuff: Cairn Research.
Related Research:
Dr. Raskar's camera culture project site.
Compressive sensing single pixel camera project.
The Stanford camera array site.
Columbia's computer vision laboratory: CAVE site.
My info (CV etc.) is here.