High Resolution Stills from High Speed Video - Enough to Create a Company?

Physorg.com quotes University of Oxford's Dr. Peter Kohl saying "Dr Gil Bub from my team then came up with a really great idea to bring together high-resolution still images and high-speed video footage, at the same time and on the same camera chip".

As Nature Journal reports, "by offsetting pixel-exposure times during capture of a single image frame, embeds temporal information in each frame. This allows simultaneous acquisition of full-resolution images at native detector frame rates and high-speed image sequences at reduced resolution, without increasing bandwidth requirements. We demonstrate this method using macroscopic and microscopic examples, including imaging calcium transients in heart cells at 250 Hz using a 10-Hz megapixel camera."

This concept has attracted the attention of Cairn Research, a UK based scientific instrument manufacturer. The technology has been patented by Isis Innovation, the University of Oxford's technology transfer office, which provided seed funding for this development. Dr. Mark Pitter from the University of Nottingham is planning to compress the technology into an all-in-one sensor that could be put inside normal cameras.

Update: UK Telegraph published quite a long article on the camera idea.