79,590 research outputs found
An efficient algorithm to compute subsets of points in ℤ n
In this paper we show a more efficient algorithm than that in [8] to compute subsets of points non-congruent by isometries. This algorithm can be used to reconstruct the object from the digital image. Both algorithms are compared, highlighting the improvements obtained in terms of CPU time
Algorithmic patterns for -matrices on many-core processors
In this work, we consider the reformulation of hierarchical ()
matrix algorithms for many-core processors with a model implementation on
graphics processing units (GPUs). matrices approximate specific
dense matrices, e.g., from discretized integral equations or kernel ridge
regression, leading to log-linear time complexity in dense matrix-vector
products. The parallelization of matrix operations on many-core
processors is difficult due to the complex nature of the underlying algorithms.
While previous algorithmic advances for many-core hardware focused on
accelerating existing matrix CPU implementations by many-core
processors, we here aim at totally relying on that processor type. As main
contribution, we introduce the necessary parallel algorithmic patterns allowing
to map the full matrix construction and the fast matrix-vector
product to many-core hardware. Here, crucial ingredients are space filling
curves, parallel tree traversal and batching of linear algebra operations. The
resulting model GPU implementation hmglib is the, to the best of the authors
knowledge, first entirely GPU-based Open Source matrix library of
this kind. We conclude this work by an in-depth performance analysis and a
comparative performance study against a standard matrix library,
highlighting profound speedups of our many-core parallel approach
Large Scale SfM with the Distributed Camera Model
We introduce the distributed camera model, a novel model for
Structure-from-Motion (SfM). This model describes image observations in terms
of light rays with ray origins and directions rather than pixels. As such, the
proposed model is capable of describing a single camera or multiple cameras
simultaneously as the collection of all light rays observed. We show how the
distributed camera model is a generalization of the standard camera model and
describe a general formulation and solution to the absolute camera pose problem
that works for standard or distributed cameras. The proposed method computes a
solution that is up to 8 times more efficient and robust to rotation
singularities in comparison with gDLS. Finally, this method is used in an novel
large-scale incremental SfM pipeline where distributed cameras are accurately
and robustly merged together. This pipeline is a direct generalization of
traditional incremental SfM; however, instead of incrementally adding one
camera at a time to grow the reconstruction the reconstruction is grown by
adding a distributed camera. Our pipeline produces highly accurate
reconstructions efficiently by avoiding the need for many bundle adjustment
iterations and is capable of computing a 3D model of Rome from over 15,000
images in just 22 minutes.Comment: Published at 2016 3DV Conferenc
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