86,368 research outputs found

    Precise Depth Image Based Real-Time 3D Difference Detection

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    3D difference detection is the task to verify whether the 3D geometry of a real object exactly corresponds to a 3D model of this object. This thesis introduces real-time 3D difference detection with a hand-held depth camera. In contrast to previous works, with the proposed approach, geometric differences can be detected in real time and from arbitrary viewpoints. Therefore, the scan position of the 3D difference detection be changed on the fly, during the 3D scan. Thus, the user can move the scan position closer to the object to inspect details or to bypass occlusions. The main research questions addressed by this thesis are: Q1: How can 3D differences be detected in real time and from arbitrary viewpoints using a single depth camera? Q2: Extending the first question, how can 3D differences be detected with a high precision? Q3: Which accuracy can be achieved with concrete setups of the proposed concept for real time, depth image based 3D difference detection? This thesis answers Q1 by introducing a real-time approach for depth image based 3D difference detection. The real-time difference detection is based on an algorithm which maps the 3D measurements of a depth camera onto an arbitrary 3D model in real time by fusing computer vision (depth imaging and pose estimation) with a computer graphics based analysis-by-synthesis approach. Then, this thesis answers Q2 by providing solutions for enhancing the 3D difference detection accuracy, both by precise pose estimation and by reducing depth measurement noise. A precise variant of the 3D difference detection concept is proposed, which combines two main aspects. First, the precision of the depth camera’s pose estimation is improved by coupling the depth camera with a very precise coordinate measuring machine. Second, measurement noise of the captured depth images is reduced and missing depth information is filled in by extending the 3D difference detection with 3D reconstruction. The accuracy of the proposed 3D difference detection is quantified by a quantitative evaluation. This provides an anwer to Q3. The accuracy is evaluated both for the basic setup and for the variants that focus on a high precision. The quantitative evaluation using real-world data covers both the accuracy which can be achieved with a time-of-flight camera (SwissRanger 4000) and with a structured light depth camera (Kinect). With the basic setup and the structured light depth camera, differences of 8 to 24 millimeters can be detected from one meter measurement distance. With the enhancements proposed for precise 3D difference detection, differences of 4 to 12 millimeters can be detected from one meter measurement distance using the same depth camera. By solving the challenges described by the three research question, this thesis provides a solution for precise real-time 3D difference detection based on depth images. With the approach proposed in this thesis, dense 3D differences can be detected in real time and from arbitrary viewpoints using a single depth camera. Furthermore, by coupling the depth camera with a coordinate measuring machine and by integrating 3D reconstruction in the 3D difference detection, 3D differences can be detected in real time and with a high precision

    Probabilistic Global Scale Estimation for MonoSLAM Based on Generic Object Detection

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    This paper proposes a novel method to estimate the global scale of a 3D reconstructed model within a Kalman filtering-based monocular SLAM algorithm. Our Bayesian framework integrates height priors over the detected objects belonging to a set of broad predefined classes, based on recent advances in fast generic object detection. Each observation is produced on single frames, so that we do not need a data association process along video frames. This is because we associate the height priors with the image region sizes at image places where map features projections fall within the object detection regions. We present very promising results of this approach obtained on several experiments with different object classes.Comment: Int. Workshop on Visual Odometry, CVPR, (July 2017

    Frequency-modulated continuous-wave LiDAR compressive depth-mapping

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    We present an inexpensive architecture for converting a frequency-modulated continuous-wave LiDAR system into a compressive-sensing based depth-mapping camera. Instead of raster scanning to obtain depth-maps, compressive sensing is used to significantly reduce the number of measurements. Ideally, our approach requires two difference detectors. % but can operate with only one at the cost of doubling the number of measurments. Due to the large flux entering the detectors, the signal amplification from heterodyne detection, and the effects of background subtraction from compressive sensing, the system can obtain higher signal-to-noise ratios over detector-array based schemes while scanning a scene faster than is possible through raster-scanning. %Moreover, we show how a single total-variation minimization and two fast least-squares minimizations, instead of a single complex nonlinear minimization, can efficiently recover high-resolution depth-maps with minimal computational overhead. Moreover, by efficiently storing only 2m2m data points from m<nm<n measurements of an nn pixel scene, we can easily extract depths by solving only two linear equations with efficient convex-optimization methods
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