818 research outputs found

    3D Reconstruction of Indoor Corridor Models Using Single Imagery and Video Sequences

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    In recent years, 3D indoor modeling has gained more attention due to its role in decision-making process of maintaining the status and managing the security of building indoor spaces. In this thesis, the problem of continuous indoor corridor space modeling has been tackled through two approaches. The first approach develops a modeling method based on middle-level perceptual organization. The second approach develops a visual Simultaneous Localisation and Mapping (SLAM) system with model-based loop closure. In the first approach, the image space was searched for a corridor layout that can be converted into a geometrically accurate 3D model. Manhattan rule assumption was adopted, and indoor corridor layout hypotheses were generated through a random rule-based intersection of image physical line segments and virtual rays of orthogonal vanishing points. Volumetric reasoning, correspondences to physical edges, orientation map and geometric context of an image are all considered for scoring layout hypotheses. This approach provides physically plausible solutions while facing objects or occlusions in a corridor scene. In the second approach, Layout SLAM is introduced. Layout SLAM performs camera localization while maps layout corners and normal point features in 3D space. Here, a new feature matching cost function was proposed considering both local and global context information. In addition, a rotation compensation variable makes Layout SLAM robust against cameras orientation errors accumulations. Moreover, layout model matching of keyframes insures accurate loop closures that prevent miss-association of newly visited landmarks to previously visited scene parts. The comparison of generated single image-based 3D models to ground truth models showed that average ratio differences in widths, heights and lengths were 1.8%, 3.7% and 19.2% respectively. Moreover, Layout SLAM performed with the maximum absolute trajectory error of 2.4m in position and 8.2 degree in orientation for approximately 318m path on RAWSEEDS data set. Loop closing was strongly performed for Layout SLAM and provided 3D indoor corridor layouts with less than 1.05m displacement errors in length and less than 20cm in width and height for approximately 315m path on York University data set. The proposed methods can successfully generate 3D indoor corridor models compared to their major counterpart

    Tracking MEP installation works

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    Point cloud segmentation using hierarchical tree for architectural models

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    Recent developments in the 3D scanning technologies have made the generation of highly accurate 3D point clouds relatively easy but the segmentation of these point clouds remains a challenging area. A number of techniques have set precedent of either planar or primitive based segmentation in literature. In this work, we present a novel and an effective primitive based point cloud segmentation algorithm. The primary focus, i.e. the main technical contribution of our method is a hierarchical tree which iteratively divides the point cloud into segments. This tree uses an exclusive energy function and a 3D convolutional neural network, HollowNets to classify the segments. We test the efficacy of our proposed approach using both real and synthetic data obtaining an accuracy greater than 90% for domes and minarets.Comment: 9 pages. 10 figures. Submitted in EuroGraphics 201

    Proposing 3D Thermal Technology for Heritage Building Energy Monitoring

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    [EN] The energy monitoring of heritage buildings has, to date, been governed by methodologies and standards that have been defined in terms of sensors that record scalar magnitudes and that are placed in specific positions in the scene, thus recording only some of the values sampled in that space. In this paper, however, we present an alternative to the aforementioned technologies in the form of new sensors based on 3D computer vision that are able to record dense thermal information in a three-dimensional space. These thermal computer vision-based technologies (3D-TCV) entail a revision and updating of the current building energy monitoring methodologies. This paper provides a detailed definition of the most significant aspects of this new extended methodology and presents a case study showing the potential of 3D-TCV techniques and how they may complement current techniques. The results obtained lead us to believe that 3D computer vision can provide the field of building monitoring with a decisive boost, particularly in the case of heritage buildingsThis research was funded by the European Regional Development Fund (SBPLY/19/180501/000094 project) and the Ministry of Science and Innovation (PID2019-108271RB-C31 and PID2019108271RB-C33).Adan, A.; Pérez, V.; Vivancos, J.; Aparicio Fernandez, CS.; Prieto, SA. (2021). Proposing 3D Thermal Technology for Heritage Building Energy Monitoring. Remote Sensing. 13(8):1-25. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13081537S12513

    State of research in automatic as-built modelling

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    This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Elsevier via http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aei.2015.01.001Building Information Models (BIMs) are becoming the official standard in the construction industry for encoding, reusing, and exchanging information about structural assets. Automatically generating such representations for existing assets stirs up the interest of various industrial, academic, and governmental parties, as it is expected to have a high economic impact. The purpose of this paper is to provide a general overview of the as-built modelling process, with focus on the geometric modelling side. Relevant works from the Computer Vision, Geometry Processing, and Civil Engineering communities are presented and compared in terms of their potential to lead to automatic as-built modelling.We acknowledge the support of EPSRC Grant NMZJ/114,DARPA UPSIDE Grant A13–0895-S002, NSF CAREER Grant N. 1054127, European Grant Agreements No. 247586 and 334241. We would also like to thank NSERC Canada, Aecon, and SNC-Lavalin for financially supporting some parts of this research

    Semantic Instance Annotation of Street Scenes by 3D to 2D Label Transfer

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    Semantic annotations are vital for training models for object recognition, semantic segmentation or scene understanding. Unfortunately, pixelwise annotation of images at very large scale is labor-intensive and only little labeled data is available, particularly at instance level and for street scenes. In this paper, we propose to tackle this problem by lifting the semantic instance labeling task from 2D into 3D. Given reconstructions from stereo or laser data, we annotate static 3D scene elements with rough bounding primitives and develop a model which transfers this information into the image domain. We leverage our method to obtain 2D labels for a novel suburban video dataset which we have collected, resulting in 400k semantic and instance image annotations. A comparison of our method to state-of-the-art label transfer baselines reveals that 3D information enables more efficient annotation while at the same time resulting in improved accuracy and time-coherent labels.Comment: 10 pages in Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), 201

    Three-Dimensional Reconstruction and Modeling Using Low-Precision Vision Sensors for Automation and Robotics Applications in Construction

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    Automation and robotics in construction (ARC) has the potential to assist in the performance of several mundane, repetitive, or dangerous construction tasks autonomously or under the supervision of human workers, and perform effective site and resource monitoring to stimulate productivity growth and facilitate safety management. When using ARC technologies, three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction is a primary requirement for perceiving and modeling the environment to generate 3D workplace models for various applications. Previous work in ARC has predominantly utilized 3D data captured from high-fidelity and expensive laser scanners for data collection and processing while paying little attention of 3D reconstruction and modeling using low-precision vision sensors, particularly for indoor ARC applications. This dissertation explores 3D reconstruction and modeling for ARC applications using low-precision vision sensors for both outdoor and indoor applications. First, to handle occlusion for cluttered environments, a joint point cloud completion and surface relation inference framework using red-green-blue and depth (RGB-D) sensors (e.g., Microsoft® Kinect) is proposed to obtain complete 3D models and the surface relations. Then, to explore the integration of prior domain knowledge, a user-guided dimensional analysis method using RGB-D sensors is designed to interactively obtain dimensional information for indoor building environments. In order to allow deployed ARC systems to be aware of or monitor humans in the environment, a real-time human tracking method using a single RGB-D sensor is designed to track specific individuals under various illumination conditions in work environments. Finally, this research also investigates the utilization of aerially collected video images for modeling ongoing excavations and automated geotechnical hazards detection and monitoring. The efficacy of the researched methods has been evaluated and validated through several experiments. Specifically, the joint point cloud completion and surface relation inference method is demonstrated to be able to recover all surface connectivity relations, double the point cloud size by adding points of which more than 87% are correct, and thus create high-quality complete 3D models of the work environment. The user-guided dimensional analysis method can provide legitimate user guidance for obtaining dimensions of interest. The average relative errors for the example scenes are less than 7% while the absolute errors less than 36mm. The designed human worker tracking method can successfully track a specific individual in real-time with high detection accuracy. The excavation slope stability monitoring framework allows convenient data collection and efficient data processing for real-time job site monitoring. The designed geotechnical hazard detection and mapping methods enable automated identification of landslides using only aerial video images collected using drones.PHDCivil EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138626/1/yongxiao_1.pd
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