797 research outputs found
Video Interpolation using Optical Flow and Laplacian Smoothness
Non-rigid video interpolation is a common computer vision task. In this paper
we present an optical flow approach which adopts a Laplacian Cotangent Mesh
constraint to enhance the local smoothness. Similar to Li et al., our approach
adopts a mesh to the image with a resolution up to one vertex per pixel and
uses angle constraints to ensure sensible local deformations between image
pairs. The Laplacian Mesh constraints are expressed wholly inside the optical
flow optimization, and can be applied in a straightforward manner to a wide
range of image tracking and registration problems. We evaluate our approach by
testing on several benchmark datasets, including the Middlebury and Garg et al.
datasets. In addition, we show application of our method for constructing 3D
Morphable Facial Models from dynamic 3D data
Intrinsic Dynamic Shape Prior for Fast, Sequential and Dense Non-Rigid Structure from Motion with Detection of Temporally-Disjoint Rigidity
While dense non-rigid structure from motion (NRSfM) has been extensively studied from the perspective of the reconstructability problem over the recent years, almost no attempts have been undertaken to bring it into the practical realm. The reasons for the slow dissemination are the severe ill-posedness, high sensitivity to motion and deformation cues and the difficulty to obtain reliable point tracks in the vast majority of practical scenarios. To fill this gap, we propose a hybrid approach that extracts prior shape knowledge from an input sequence with NRSfM and uses it as a dynamic shape prior for sequential surface recovery in scenarios with recurrence. Our Dynamic Shape Prior Reconstruction (DSPR) method can be combined with existing dense NRSfM techniques while its energy functional is optimised with stochastic gradient descent at real-time rates for new incoming point tracks. The proposed versatile framework with a new core NRSfM approach outperforms several other methods in the ability to handle inaccurate and noisy point tracks, provided we have access to a representative (in terms of the deformation variety) image sequence. Comprehensive experiments highlight convergence properties and the accuracy of DSPR under different disturbing effects. We also perform a joint study of tracking and reconstruction and show applications to shape compression and heart reconstruction under occlusions. We achieve state-of-the-art metrics (accuracy and compression ratios) in different scenarios
Multi-Scale 3D Scene Flow from Binocular Stereo Sequences
Scene flow methods estimate the three-dimensional motion field for points in the world, using multi-camera video data. Such methods combine multi-view reconstruction with motion estimation. This paper describes an alternative formulation for dense scene flow estimation that provides reliable results using only two cameras by fusing stereo and optical flow estimation into a single coherent framework. Internally, the proposed algorithm generates probability distributions for optical flow and disparity. Taking into account the uncertainty in the intermediate stages allows for more reliable estimation of the 3D scene flow than previous methods allow. To handle the aperture problems inherent in the estimation of optical flow and disparity, a multi-scale method along with a novel region-based technique is used within a regularized solution. This combined approach both preserves discontinuities and prevents over-regularization – two problems commonly associated with the basic multi-scale approaches. Experiments with synthetic and real test data demonstrate the strength of the proposed approach.National Science Foundation (CNS-0202067, IIS-0208876); Office of Naval Research (N00014-03-1-0108
Non-Rigid Structure from Motion for Complex Motion
Recovering deformable 3D motion from temporal 2D point tracks in a monocular video is an open problem with many everyday applications throughout science and industry, or the new augmented reality. Recently, several techniques have been proposed to deal the problem called Non-Rigid Structure from Motion (NRSfM), however, they can exhibit poor reconstruction performance on complex motion. In this project, we will analyze these situations for primitive human actions such as walk, run, sit, jump, etc. on different scenarios, reviewing first the current techniques to finally present our novel method. This approach is able to model complex motion into a union of subspaces, rather than the summation occurring in standard low-rank shape methods, allowing better reconstruction accuracy. Experiments in a
wide range of sequences and types of motion illustrate the benefits of this new approac
Multiframe Temporal Estimation of Cardiac Nonrigid Motion
A robust, flexible system for tracking the point to
point nonrigid motion of the left ventricular (LV) endocardial
wall in image sequences has been developed. This system is
unique in its ability to model motion trajectories across multiple
frames. The foundation of this system is an adaptive transversal
filter based on the recursive least-squares algorithm. This filter
facilitates the integration of models for periodicity and proximal
smoothness as appropriate using a contour-based description
of the object’s boundaries. A set of correspondences between
contours and an associated set of correspondence quality measures
comprise the input to the system. Frame-to-frame relationships
from two different frames of reference are derived and analyzed
using synthetic and actual images. Two multiframe temporal
models, both based on a sum of sinusoids, are derived. Illustrative
examples of the system’s output are presented for quantitative
analysis. Validation of the system is performed by comparing
computed trajectory estimates with the trajectories of physical
markers implanted in the LV wall. Sample case studies of marker
trajectory comparisons are presented. Ensemble statistics from
comparisons with 15 marker trajectories are acquired and analyzed. A multiframe temporal model without spatial periodicity
constraints was determined to provide excellent performance with
the least computational cost. A multiframe spatiotemporal model
provided the best performance based on statistical standard
deviation, although at significant computational expense.National Heart, Lung, and Blood InstituteAir Force of Scientific ResearchNational Science FoundationOffice of Naval ResearchR01HL44803F49620-99-1-0481F49620-99-1-0067MIP-9615590N00014-98-1-054
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