175 research outputs found

    Towards One Shot Learning by Imitation for Humanoid Robots

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    Deformation-based Augmented Reality for Hepatic Surgery

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    International audienceIn this paper we introduce a method for augmenting the laparoscopic view during hepatic tumor resection. Using augmented reality techniques, vessels, tumors and cutting planes computed from pre-operative data can be overlaid onto the laparoscopic video. Compared to current techniques, which are limited to a rigid registration of the pre-operative liver anatomy with the intra-operative image, we propose a real-time, physics-based, non-rigid registration. The main strength of our approach is that the deformable model can also be used to regularize the data extracted from the computer vision algorithms. We show preliminary results on a video sequence which clearly highlights the interest of using physics-based model for elastic registration

    Image-guided Simulation of Heterogeneous Tissue Deformation For Augmented Reality during Hepatic Surgery

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    International audienceThis paper presents a method for real-time augmentation of vas- cular network and tumors during minimally invasive liver surgery. Internal structures computed from pre-operative CT scans can be overlaid onto the laparoscopic view for surgery guidance. Com- pared to state-of-the-art methods, our method uses a real-time biomechanical model to compute a volumetric displacement field from partial three-dimensional liver surface motion. This permits to properly handle the motion of internal structures even in the case of anisotropic or heterogeneous tissues, as it is the case for the liver and many anatomical structures. Real-time augmentation results are presented on in vivo and ex vivo data and illustrate the benefits of such an approach for minimally invasive surgery

    Nonrigid Shape Recovery by Gaussian Process Regression

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    Ministry of Education, Singapore under its Academic Research Funding Tier

    Impact of Soft Tissue Heterogeneity on Augmented Reality for Liver Surgery

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    International audienceThis paper presents a method for real-time augmented reality of internal liver structures during minimally invasive hepatic surgery. Vessels and tumors computed from pre-operative CT scans can be overlaid onto the laparoscopic view for surgery guidance. Compared to current methods, our method is able to locate the in-depth positions of the tumors based on partial three-dimensional liver tissue motion using a real-time biomechanical model. This model permits to properly handle the motion of internal structures even in the case of anisotropic or heterogeneous tissues, as it is the case for the liver and many anatomical structures. Experimentations conducted on phantom liver permits to measure the accuracy of the augmentation while real-time augmentation on in vivo human liver during real surgery shows the benefits of such an approach for minimally invasive surgery

    Closed-Form Solution to Non-rigid 3D Surface Registration

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    We present a closed-form solution to the problem of recovering the 3D shape of a non-rigid inelastic surface from 3D-to-2D correspondences. This lets us detect and reconstruct such a, surface by matching individual images against a reference configuration, which is in contrast to all existing approaches that require initial shape estimates and track deformations from image to image

    Unsupervised Face Alignment by Robust Nonrigid Mapping

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    We propose a novel approach to unsupervised facial im-age alignment. Differently from previous approaches, that are confined to affine transformations on either the entire face or separate patches, we extract a nonrigid mapping be-tween facial images. Based on a regularized face model, we frame unsupervised face alignment into the Lucas-Kanade image registration approach. We propose a robust optimiza-tion scheme to handle appearance variations. The method is fully automatic and can cope with pose variations and ex-pressions, all in an unsupervised manner. Experiments on a large set of images showed that the approach is effective. 1

    Single View Augmentation of 3D Elastic Objects

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    International audienceThis paper proposes an efficient method to capture and augment highly elastic objects from a single view. 3D shape recovery from a monocular video sequence is an underconstrained problem and many approaches have been proposed to enforce constraints and resolve the ambiguities. State-of-the art solutions enforce smoothness or geometric constraints, consider specific deformation properties such as inextensibility or ressort to shading constraints. However, few of them can handle properly large elastic deformations. We propose in this paper a real-time method which makes use of a me chanical model and is able to handle highly elastic objects. Our method is formulated as a energy minimization problem accounting for a non-linear elastic model constrained by external image points acquired from a monocular camera. This method prevents us from formulating restrictive assumptions and specific constraint terms in the minimization. The only parameter involved in the method is the Young's modulus where we show in experiments that a rough estimate of its value is sufficient to obtain a good reconstruction. Our method is compared to existing techniques with experiments conducted on computer-generated and real data that show the effectiveness of our approach. Experiments in the context of minimally invasive liver surgery are also provided

    Physics-based Augmented Reality for 3D Deformable Object

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    International audienceThis paper introduces an original method to perform augmented or mixed reality on deformable objects. Compared to state-of-the-art techniques, our method is able to track deformations of volumetric objects and not only surfacic objects. A flexible framework that relies on the combination of a 3D motion estimation and a physics-based deformable model used as a regularization and interpolation step allows to perform a non-rigid and robust registration. Results are exposed, based on computer-generated datasets and video sequences of real environments in order to assess the relevance of our approach

    Efficient Template-based Path Imitation by Invariant Feature Mapping

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