11,501 research outputs found
Class-Based Feature Matching Across Unrestricted Transformations
We develop a novel method for class-based feature matching across large changes in viewing conditions. The method is based on the property that when objects share a similar part, the similarity is preserved across viewing conditions. Given a feature and a training set of object images, we first identify the subset of objects that share this feature. The transformation of the feature's appearance across viewing conditions is determined mainly by properties of the feature, rather than of the object in which it is embedded. Therefore, the transformed feature will be shared by approximately the same set of objects. Based on this consistency requirement, corresponding features can be reliably identified from a set of candidate matches. Unlike previous approaches, the proposed scheme compares feature appearances only in similar viewing conditions, rather than across different viewing conditions. As a result, the scheme is not restricted to locally planar objects or affine transformations. The approach also does not require examples of correct matches. We show that by using the proposed method, a dense set of accurate correspondences can be obtained. Experimental comparisons demonstrate that matching accuracy is significantly improved over previous schemes. Finally, we show that the scheme can be successfully used for invariant object recognition
CAD-model-based vision for space applications
A pose acquisition system operating in space must be able to perform well in a variety of different applications including automated guidance and inspections tasks with many different, but known objects. Since the space station is being designed with automation in mind, there will be CAD models of all the objects, including the station itself. The construction of vision models and procedures directly from the CAD models is the goal of this project. The system that is being designed and implementing must convert CAD models to vision models, predict visible features from a given view point from the vision models, construct view classes representing views of the objects, and use the view class model thus derived to rapidly determine the pose of the object from single images and/or stereo pairs
Geodesic Distance Histogram Feature for Video Segmentation
This paper proposes a geodesic-distance-based feature that encodes global
information for improved video segmentation algorithms. The feature is a joint
histogram of intensity and geodesic distances, where the geodesic distances are
computed as the shortest paths between superpixels via their boundaries. We
also incorporate adaptive voting weights and spatial pyramid configurations to
include spatial information into the geodesic histogram feature and show that
this further improves results. The feature is generic and can be used as part
of various algorithms. In experiments, we test the geodesic histogram feature
by incorporating it into two existing video segmentation frameworks. This leads
to significantly better performance in 3D video segmentation benchmarks on two
datasets
Proposal Flow: Semantic Correspondences from Object Proposals
Finding image correspondences remains a challenging problem in the presence
of intra-class variations and large changes in scene layout. Semantic flow
methods are designed to handle images depicting different instances of the same
object or scene category. We introduce a novel approach to semantic flow,
dubbed proposal flow, that establishes reliable correspondences using object
proposals. Unlike prevailing semantic flow approaches that operate on pixels or
regularly sampled local regions, proposal flow benefits from the
characteristics of modern object proposals, that exhibit high repeatability at
multiple scales, and can take advantage of both local and geometric consistency
constraints among proposals. We also show that the corresponding sparse
proposal flow can effectively be transformed into a conventional dense flow
field. We introduce two new challenging datasets that can be used to evaluate
both general semantic flow techniques and region-based approaches such as
proposal flow. We use these benchmarks to compare different matching
algorithms, object proposals, and region features within proposal flow, to the
state of the art in semantic flow. This comparison, along with experiments on
standard datasets, demonstrates that proposal flow significantly outperforms
existing semantic flow methods in various settings.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1511.0506
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