29,694 research outputs found
Precise localization for aerial inspection using augmented reality markers
The final publication is available at link.springer.comThis chapter is devoted to explaining a method for precise localization using augmented reality markers. This method can achieve precision of less of 5 mm in position at a distance of 0.7 m, using a visual mark of 17 mm × 17 mm, and it can be used by controller when the aerial robot is doing a manipulation task. The localization method is based on optimizing the alignment of deformable contours from textureless images working from the raw vertexes of the observed contour. The algorithm optimizes the alignment of the XOR area computed by means of computer graphics clipping techniques. The method can run at 25 frames per second.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Scalable Dense Non-rigid Structure-from-Motion: A Grassmannian Perspective
This paper addresses the task of dense non-rigid structure-from-motion
(NRSfM) using multiple images. State-of-the-art methods to this problem are
often hurdled by scalability, expensive computations, and noisy measurements.
Further, recent methods to NRSfM usually either assume a small number of sparse
feature points or ignore local non-linearities of shape deformations, and thus
cannot reliably model complex non-rigid deformations. To address these issues,
in this paper, we propose a new approach for dense NRSfM by modeling the
problem on a Grassmann manifold. Specifically, we assume the complex non-rigid
deformations lie on a union of local linear subspaces both spatially and
temporally. This naturally allows for a compact representation of the complex
non-rigid deformation over frames. We provide experimental results on several
synthetic and real benchmark datasets. The procured results clearly demonstrate
that our method, apart from being scalable and more accurate than
state-of-the-art methods, is also more robust to noise and generalizes to
highly non-linear deformations.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in Conference
on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), 2018, typos fixed and
acknowledgement adde
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