2,394 research outputs found
Structured Light-Based 3D Reconstruction System for Plants.
Camera-based 3D reconstruction of physical objects is one of the most popular computer vision trends in recent years. Many systems have been built to model different real-world subjects, but there is lack of a completely robust system for plants. This paper presents a full 3D reconstruction system that incorporates both hardware structures (including the proposed structured light system to enhance textures on object surfaces) and software algorithms (including the proposed 3D point cloud registration and plant feature measurement). This paper demonstrates the ability to produce 3D models of whole plants created from multiple pairs of stereo images taken at different viewing angles, without the need to destructively cut away any parts of a plant. The ability to accurately predict phenotyping features, such as the number of leaves, plant height, leaf size and internode distances, is also demonstrated. Experimental results show that, for plants having a range of leaf sizes and a distance between leaves appropriate for the hardware design, the algorithms successfully predict phenotyping features in the target crops, with a recall of 0.97 and a precision of 0.89 for leaf detection and less than a 13-mm error for plant size, leaf size and internode distance
From Multiview Image Curves to 3D Drawings
Reconstructing 3D scenes from multiple views has made impressive strides in
recent years, chiefly by correlating isolated feature points, intensity
patterns, or curvilinear structures. In the general setting - without
controlled acquisition, abundant texture, curves and surfaces following
specific models or limiting scene complexity - most methods produce unorganized
point clouds, meshes, or voxel representations, with some exceptions producing
unorganized clouds of 3D curve fragments. Ideally, many applications require
structured representations of curves, surfaces and their spatial relationships.
This paper presents a step in this direction by formulating an approach that
combines 2D image curves into a collection of 3D curves, with topological
connectivity between them represented as a 3D graph. This results in a 3D
drawing, which is complementary to surface representations in the same sense as
a 3D scaffold complements a tent taut over it. We evaluate our results against
truth on synthetic and real datasets.Comment: Expanded ECCV 2016 version with tweaked figures and including an
overview of the supplementary material available at
multiview-3d-drawing.sourceforge.ne
Joint Reconstruction of Multi-view Compressed Images
The distributed representation of correlated multi-view images is an
important problem that arise in vision sensor networks. This paper concentrates
on the joint reconstruction problem where the distributively compressed
correlated images are jointly decoded in order to improve the reconstruction
quality of all the compressed images. We consider a scenario where the images
captured at different viewpoints are encoded independently using common coding
solutions (e.g., JPEG, H.264 intra) with a balanced rate distribution among
different cameras. A central decoder first estimates the underlying correlation
model from the independently compressed images which will be used for the joint
signal recovery. The joint reconstruction is then cast as a constrained convex
optimization problem that reconstructs total-variation (TV) smooth images that
comply with the estimated correlation model. At the same time, we add
constraints that force the reconstructed images to be consistent with their
compressed versions. We show by experiments that the proposed joint
reconstruction scheme outperforms independent reconstruction in terms of image
quality, for a given target bit rate. In addition, the decoding performance of
our proposed algorithm compares advantageously to state-of-the-art distributed
coding schemes based on disparity learning and on the DISCOVER
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