31,482 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
Object-based 2D-to-3D video conversion for effective stereoscopic content generation in 3D-TV applications
Three-dimensional television (3D-TV) has gained increasing popularity in the broadcasting domain, as it enables enhanced viewing experiences in comparison to conventional two-dimensional (2D) TV. However, its application has been constrained due to the lack of essential contents, i.e., stereoscopic videos. To alleviate such content shortage, an economical and practical solution is to reuse the huge media resources that are available in monoscopic 2D and convert them to stereoscopic 3D. Although stereoscopic video can be generated from monoscopic sequences using depth measurements extracted from cues like focus blur, motion and size, the quality of the resulting video may be poor as such measurements are usually arbitrarily defined and appear inconsistent with the real scenes. To help solve this problem, a novel method for object-based stereoscopic video generation is proposed which features i) optical-flow based occlusion reasoning in determining depth ordinal, ii) object segmentation using improved region-growing from masks of determined depth layers, and iii) a hybrid depth estimation scheme using content-based matching (inside a small library of true stereo image pairs) and depth-ordinal based regularization. Comprehensive experiments have validated the effectiveness of our proposed 2D-to-3D conversion method in generating stereoscopic videos of consistent depth measurements for 3D-TV applications
iPose: Instance-Aware 6D Pose Estimation of Partly Occluded Objects
We address the task of 6D pose estimation of known rigid objects from single
input images in scenarios where the objects are partly occluded. Recent
RGB-D-based methods are robust to moderate degrees of occlusion. For RGB
inputs, no previous method works well for partly occluded objects. Our main
contribution is to present the first deep learning-based system that estimates
accurate poses for partly occluded objects from RGB-D and RGB input. We achieve
this with a new instance-aware pipeline that decomposes 6D object pose
estimation into a sequence of simpler steps, where each step removes specific
aspects of the problem. The first step localizes all known objects in the image
using an instance segmentation network, and hence eliminates surrounding
clutter and occluders. The second step densely maps pixels to 3D object surface
positions, so called object coordinates, using an encoder-decoder network, and
hence eliminates object appearance. The third, and final, step predicts the 6D
pose using geometric optimization. We demonstrate that we significantly
outperform the state-of-the-art for pose estimation of partly occluded objects
for both RGB and RGB-D input
Fast Graph-Based Object Segmentation for RGB-D Images
Object segmentation is an important capability for robotic systems, in
particular for grasping. We present a graph- based approach for the
segmentation of simple objects from RGB-D images. We are interested in
segmenting objects with large variety in appearance, from lack of texture to
strong textures, for the task of robotic grasping. The algorithm does not rely
on image features or machine learning. We propose a modified Canny edge
detector for extracting robust edges by using depth information and two simple
cost functions for combining color and depth cues. The cost functions are used
to build an undirected graph, which is partitioned using the concept of
internal and external differences between graph regions. The partitioning is
fast with O(NlogN) complexity. We also discuss ways to deal with missing depth
information. We test the approach on different publicly available RGB-D object
datasets, such as the Rutgers APC RGB-D dataset and the RGB-D Object Dataset,
and compare the results with other existing methods
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