8,570 research outputs found
Guided Filtering based Pyramidal Stereo Matching for Unrectified Images
Stereo matching deals with recovering quantitative
depth information from a set of input images, based on the visual
disparity between corresponding points. Generally most of the
algorithms assume that the processed images are rectified. As
robotics becomes popular, conducting stereo matching in the
context of cloth manipulation, such as obtaining the disparity
map of the garments from the two cameras of the cloth folding
robot, is useful and challenging. This is resulted from the fact of
the high efficiency, accuracy and low memory requirement under
the usage of high resolution images in order to capture the details
(e.g. cloth wrinkles) for the given application (e.g. cloth folding).
Meanwhile, the images can be unrectified. Therefore, we propose
to adapt guided filtering algorithm into the pyramidical stereo
matching framework that works directly for unrectified images.
To evaluate the proposed unrectified stereo matching in terms of
accuracy, we present three datasets that are suited to especially
the characteristics of the task of cloth manipulations. By com-
paring the proposed algorithm with two baseline algorithms on
those three datasets, we demonstrate that our proposed approach
is accurate, efficient and requires low memory. This also shows
that rather than relying on image rectification, directly applying
stereo matching through the unrectified images can be also quite
effective and meanwhile efficien
RSGM: Real-time Raster-Respecting Semi-Global Matching for Power-Constrained Systems
Stereo depth estimation is used for many computer vision applications. Though
many popular methods strive solely for depth quality, for real-time mobile
applications (e.g. prosthetic glasses or micro-UAVs), speed and power
efficiency are equally, if not more, important. Many real-world systems rely on
Semi-Global Matching (SGM) to achieve a good accuracy vs. speed balance, but
power efficiency is hard to achieve with conventional hardware, making the use
of embedded devices such as FPGAs attractive for low-power applications.
However, the full SGM algorithm is ill-suited to deployment on FPGAs, and so
most FPGA variants of it are partial, at the expense of accuracy. In a non-FPGA
context, the accuracy of SGM has been improved by More Global Matching (MGM),
which also helps tackle the streaking artifacts that afflict SGM. In this
paper, we propose a novel, resource-efficient method that is inspired by MGM's
techniques for improving depth quality, but which can be implemented to run in
real time on a low-power FPGA. Through evaluation on multiple datasets (KITTI
and Middlebury), we show that in comparison to other real-time capable stereo
approaches, we can achieve a state-of-the-art balance between accuracy, power
efficiency and speed, making our approach highly desirable for use in real-time
systems with limited power.Comment: Accepted in FPT 2018 as Oral presentation, 8 pages, 6 figures, 4
table
Acceleration of stereo-matching on multi-core CPU and GPU
This paper presents an accelerated version of a
dense stereo-correspondence algorithm for two different parallelism
enabled architectures, multi-core CPU and GPU. The
algorithm is part of the vision system developed for a binocular
robot-head in the context of the CloPeMa 1 research project.
This research project focuses on the conception of a new clothes
folding robot with real-time and high resolution requirements
for the vision system. The performance analysis shows that
the parallelised stereo-matching algorithm has been significantly
accelerated, maintaining 12x and 176x speed-up respectively
for multi-core CPU and GPU, compared with non-SIMD singlethread
CPU. To analyse the origin of the speed-up and gain
deeper understanding about the choice of the optimal hardware,
the algorithm was broken into key sub-tasks and the performance
was tested for four different hardware architectures
Locally Adaptive Stereo Vision Based 3D Visual Reconstruction
abstract: Using stereo vision for 3D reconstruction and depth estimation has become a popular and promising research area as it has a simple setup with passive cameras and relatively efficient processing procedure. The work in this dissertation focuses on locally adaptive stereo vision methods and applications to different imaging setups and image scenes.
Solder ball height and substrate coplanarity inspection is essential to the detection of potential connectivity issues in semi-conductor units. Current ball height and substrate coplanarity inspection tools are expensive and slow, which makes them difficult to use in a real-time manufacturing setting. In this dissertation, an automatic, stereo vision based, in-line ball height and coplanarity inspection method is presented. The proposed method includes an imaging setup together with a computer vision algorithm for reliable, in-line ball height measurement. The imaging setup and calibration, ball height estimation and substrate coplanarity calculation are presented with novel stereo vision methods. The results of the proposed method are evaluated in a measurement capability analysis (MCA) procedure and compared with the ground-truth obtained by an existing laser scanning tool and an existing confocal inspection tool. The proposed system outperforms existing inspection tools in terms of accuracy and stability.
In a rectified stereo vision system, stereo matching methods can be categorized into global methods and local methods. Local stereo methods are more suitable for real-time processing purposes with competitive accuracy as compared with global methods. This work proposes a stereo matching method based on sparse locally adaptive cost aggregation. In order to reduce outlier disparity values that correspond to mis-matches, a novel sparse disparity subset selection method is proposed by assigning a significance status to candidate disparity values, and selecting the significant disparity values adaptively. An adaptive guided filtering method using the disparity subset for refined cost aggregation and disparity calculation is demonstrated. The proposed stereo matching algorithm is tested on the Middlebury and the KITTI stereo evaluation benchmark images. A performance analysis of the proposed method in terms of the I0 norm of the disparity subset is presented to demonstrate the achieved efficiency and accuracy.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201
Real-Time Dense Stereo Matching With ELAS on FPGA Accelerated Embedded Devices
For many applications in low-power real-time robotics, stereo cameras are the
sensors of choice for depth perception as they are typically cheaper and more
versatile than their active counterparts. Their biggest drawback, however, is
that they do not directly sense depth maps; instead, these must be estimated
through data-intensive processes. Therefore, appropriate algorithm selection
plays an important role in achieving the desired performance characteristics.
Motivated by applications in space and mobile robotics, we implement and
evaluate a FPGA-accelerated adaptation of the ELAS algorithm. Despite offering
one of the best trade-offs between efficiency and accuracy, ELAS has only been
shown to run at 1.5-3 fps on a high-end CPU. Our system preserves all
intriguing properties of the original algorithm, such as the slanted plane
priors, but can achieve a frame rate of 47fps whilst consuming under 4W of
power. Unlike previous FPGA based designs, we take advantage of both components
on the CPU/FPGA System-on-Chip to showcase the strategy necessary to accelerate
more complex and computationally diverse algorithms for such low power,
real-time systems.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, 2 table
- …