5,241 research outputs found
Towards binocular active vision in a robot head system
This paper presents the first results of an investigation and pilot study into an active, binocular vision system that combines binocular vergence, object recognition and attention control in a unified framework. The prototype developed is capable of identifying, targeting, verging on and recognizing objects in a highly-cluttered scene without the need for calibration or other knowledge of the camera geometry. This is achieved by implementing all image analysis in a symbolic space without creating explicit pixel-space maps. The system structure is based on the âsearchlight metaphorâ of biological systems. We present results of a first pilot investigation that yield a maximum vergence error of 6.4 pixels, while seven of nine known objects were recognized in a high-cluttered environment. Finally a âstepping stoneâ visual search strategy was demonstrated, taking a total of 40 saccades to find two known objects in the workspace, neither of which appeared simultaneously within the Field of View resulting from any individual saccade
Cross-calibration of Time-of-flight and Colour Cameras
Time-of-flight cameras provide depth information, which is complementary to
the photometric appearance of the scene in ordinary images. It is desirable to
merge the depth and colour information, in order to obtain a coherent scene
representation. However, the individual cameras will have different viewpoints,
resolutions and fields of view, which means that they must be mutually
calibrated. This paper presents a geometric framework for this multi-view and
multi-modal calibration problem. It is shown that three-dimensional projective
transformations can be used to align depth and parallax-based representations
of the scene, with or without Euclidean reconstruction. A new evaluation
procedure is also developed; this allows the reprojection error to be
decomposed into calibration and sensor-dependent components. The complete
approach is demonstrated on a network of three time-of-flight and six colour
cameras. The applications of such a system, to a range of automatic
scene-interpretation problems, are discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, 3 table
On the Calibration of Active Binocular and RGBD Vision Systems for Dual-Arm Robots
This paper describes a camera and hand-eye
calibration methodology for integrating an active binocular
robot head within a dual-arm robot. For this purpose, we
derive the forward kinematic model of our active robot head
and describe our methodology for calibrating and integrating
our robot head. This rigid calibration provides a closedform
hand-to-eye solution. We then present an approach for
updating dynamically camera external parameters for optimal
3D reconstruction that are the foundation for robotic tasks such
as grasping and manipulating rigid and deformable objects. We
show from experimental results that our robot head achieves
an overall sub millimetre accuracy of less than 0.3 millimetres
while recovering the 3D structure of a scene. In addition, we
report a comparative study between current RGBD cameras
and our active stereo head within two dual-arm robotic testbeds
that demonstrates the accuracy and portability of our proposed
methodology
Stereo TV enhancement study Final technical report
Human depth perception of television displays in stereo, and nonstereo presentation
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