7,248 research outputs found
A bayesian approach to simultaneously recover camera pose and non-rigid shape from monocular images
© . This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/In this paper we bring the tools of the Simultaneous Localization and Map Building (SLAM) problem from a rigid to a deformable domain and use them to simultaneously recover the 3D shape of non-rigid surfaces and the sequence of poses of a moving camera. Under the assumption that the surface shape may be represented as a weighted sum of deformation modes, we show that the problem of estimating the modal weights along with the camera poses, can be probabilistically formulated as a maximum a posteriori estimate and solved using an iterative least squares optimization. In addition, the probabilistic formulation we propose is very general and allows introducing different constraints without requiring any extra complexity. As a proof of concept, we show that local inextensibility constraints that prevent the surface from stretching can be easily integrated.
An extensive evaluation on synthetic and real data, demonstrates that our method has several advantages over current non-rigid shape from motion approaches. In particular, we show that our solution is robust to large amounts of noise and outliers and that it does not need to track points over the whole sequence nor to use an initialization close from the ground truth.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
MLPnP - A Real-Time Maximum Likelihood Solution to the Perspective-n-Point Problem
In this paper, a statistically optimal solution to the Perspective-n-Point
(PnP) problem is presented. Many solutions to the PnP problem are geometrically
optimal, but do not consider the uncertainties of the observations. In
addition, it would be desirable to have an internal estimation of the accuracy
of the estimated rotation and translation parameters of the camera pose. Thus,
we propose a novel maximum likelihood solution to the PnP problem, that
incorporates image observation uncertainties and remains real-time capable at
the same time. Further, the presented method is general, as is works with 3D
direction vectors instead of 2D image points and is thus able to cope with
arbitrary central camera models. This is achieved by projecting (and thus
reducing) the covariance matrices of the observations to the corresponding
vector tangent space.Comment: Submitted to the ISPRS congress (2016) in Prague. Oral Presentation.
Published in ISPRS Ann. Photogramm. Remote Sens. Spatial Inf. Sci., III-3,
131-13
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