11,153 research outputs found
Computing surface-based photo-consistency on graphics hardware
© Copyright 2005 IEEEThis paper describes a novel approach to the problem of recovering information from an image set by comparing the radiance of hypothesised point correspondences. Our algorithm is applicable to a number of problems in computer vision, but is explained particularly in terms of recovering geometry from an image set. It uses the idea of photo-consistency to measure the confidence that a hypothesised scene description generated the reference images. Photo-consistency has been used in volumetric scene reconstruction where a hypothesised surface is evolved by considering one voxel at a time. Our approach is different: it represents the scene as a parameterised surface so decisions can be made about its photo-consistency simultaneously over the entire surface rather than a series of independent decisions. Our approach is further characterised by its ability to execute on graphics hardware. Experiments demonstrate that our cost function minimises at the solution and is not adversely affected by occlusion
Accelerated volumetric reconstruction from uncalibrated camera views
While both work with images, computer graphics and computer vision are inverse problems. Computer graphics starts traditionally with input geometric models and produces image sequences. Computer vision starts with input image sequences and produces geometric models. In the last few years, there has been a convergence of research to bridge the gap between the two fields.
This convergence has produced a new field called Image-based Rendering and Modeling (IBMR). IBMR represents the effort of using the geometric information recovered from real images to generate new images with the hope that the synthesized
ones appear photorealistic, as well as reducing the time spent on model creation.
In this dissertation, the capturing, geometric and photometric aspects of an IBMR system are studied. A versatile framework was developed that enables the reconstruction of scenes from images acquired with a handheld digital camera. The proposed system targets applications in areas such as Computer Gaming and Virtual Reality, from a lowcost perspective. In the spirit of IBMR, the human operator is allowed to provide the high-level information, while underlying algorithms are used to perform low-level computational work. Conforming to the latest architecture trends, we propose a streaming voxel carving method, allowing a fast GPU-based processing on commodity hardware
CNN-based Real-time Dense Face Reconstruction with Inverse-rendered Photo-realistic Face Images
With the powerfulness of convolution neural networks (CNN), CNN based face
reconstruction has recently shown promising performance in reconstructing
detailed face shape from 2D face images. The success of CNN-based methods
relies on a large number of labeled data. The state-of-the-art synthesizes such
data using a coarse morphable face model, which however has difficulty to
generate detailed photo-realistic images of faces (with wrinkles). This paper
presents a novel face data generation method. Specifically, we render a large
number of photo-realistic face images with different attributes based on
inverse rendering. Furthermore, we construct a fine-detailed face image dataset
by transferring different scales of details from one image to another. We also
construct a large number of video-type adjacent frame pairs by simulating the
distribution of real video data. With these nicely constructed datasets, we
propose a coarse-to-fine learning framework consisting of three convolutional
networks. The networks are trained for real-time detailed 3D face
reconstruction from monocular video as well as from a single image. Extensive
experimental results demonstrate that our framework can produce high-quality
reconstruction but with much less computation time compared to the
state-of-the-art. Moreover, our method is robust to pose, expression and
lighting due to the diversity of data.Comment: Accepted by IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine
Intelligence, 201
Mesh-based 3D Textured Urban Mapping
In the era of autonomous driving, urban mapping represents a core step to let
vehicles interact with the urban context. Successful mapping algorithms have
been proposed in the last decade building the map leveraging on data from a
single sensor. The focus of the system presented in this paper is twofold: the
joint estimation of a 3D map from lidar data and images, based on a 3D mesh,
and its texturing. Indeed, even if most surveying vehicles for mapping are
endowed by cameras and lidar, existing mapping algorithms usually rely on
either images or lidar data; moreover both image-based and lidar-based systems
often represent the map as a point cloud, while a continuous textured mesh
representation would be useful for visualization and navigation purposes. In
the proposed framework, we join the accuracy of the 3D lidar data, and the
dense information and appearance carried by the images, in estimating a
visibility consistent map upon the lidar measurements, and refining it
photometrically through the acquired images. We evaluate the proposed framework
against the KITTI dataset and we show the performance improvement with respect
to two state of the art urban mapping algorithms, and two widely used surface
reconstruction algorithms in Computer Graphics.Comment: accepted at iros 201
TechNews digests: Jan - Mar 2010
TechNews is a technology, news and analysis service aimed at anyone in the education sector keen to stay informed about technology developments, trends and issues. TechNews focuses on emerging technologies and other technology news. TechNews service : digests september 2004 till May 2010 Analysis pieces and News combined publish every 2 to 3 month
Recommended from our members
3D Reconstruction Using Labeled Image Regions
In this paper we present a novel algorithm for reconstructing 3D scenes from a set of images. The user defines a set of polygonal regions with corresponding labels in each image using familiar 2D photo-editing tools. Our reconstruction algorithm computes the 3D model with maximum volume that is consistent with the set of regions in the input images. The algorithm is fast, uses only 2D intersection operations, and directly computes a polygonal model. We implemented a user-assisted system for 3D scene reconstruction and show results on scenes that are difficult or impossible to reconstruct with other methods.Engineering and Applied Science
- âŠ