2,800 research outputs found

    AirCode: Unobtrusive Physical Tags for Digital Fabrication

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    We present AirCode, a technique that allows the user to tag physically fabricated objects with given information. An AirCode tag consists of a group of carefully designed air pockets placed beneath the object surface. These air pockets are easily produced during the fabrication process of the object, without any additional material or postprocessing. Meanwhile, the air pockets affect only the scattering light transport under the surface, and thus are hard to notice to our naked eyes. But, by using a computational imaging method, the tags become detectable. We present a tool that automates the design of air pockets for the user to encode information. AirCode system also allows the user to retrieve the information from captured images via a robust decoding algorithm. We demonstrate our tagging technique with applications for metadata embedding, robotic grasping, as well as conveying object affordances.Comment: ACM UIST 2017 Technical Paper

    TangiBoard: a toolkit to reduce the implementation burden of tangible user interfaces in education

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    The use of Tangible User Interfaces (TUI) as an educational technology has gained sustained interest over the years with common agreement on its innate ability to engage and intrigue students in active-learning pedagogies. Whilst encouraging results have been obtained in research, the widespread adoption of TUI architectures is still hindered by a myriad of implementation burdens imposed by current toolkits. To this end, this paper presents an innovative TUI toolkit: TangiBoard, which enables the deployment of an interactive TUI system using low-cost, and presently available educational technology. Apart from curtailing setup costs and technical expertise required for adopting TUI systems, the toolkit provides an application framework to facilitate system calibration and development integration with GUI applications. This is enabled by a robust computer vision application that tracks a contributed passive marker set providing a range of tangible interactions to TUI frameworks. The effectiveness of this toolkit was evaluated by computer systems developers with respect to alternate toolkits for TUI design. Open-source versions of the TangiBoard toolkit together with marker sets are provided online through research licens

    Detection and Identification Techniques for Markers Used in Computer Vision

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    This paper summarizes and compares techniques for detecting and identifying markers in the context of computer vision. Existing approaches either use correlation, digital or topological methods for marker identification. The comparison points out, that all marker processing algorithms which employ sophisticated digital codes perform more robust and reliable. Existing bit representation schemes for these codes and marker designs are compared with each other. In the overall context it is illustrated, why the marker processing algorithm is the best performer regarding marker occlusion and minimal detectable pattern size

    A depth camera motion analysis framework for tele-rehabilitation : motion capture and person-centric kinematics analysis

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    With increasing importance given to telerehabilitation, there is a growing need for accurate, low-cost, and portable motion capture systems that do not require specialist assessment venues. This paper proposes a novel framework for motion capture using only a single depth camera, which is portable and cost effective compared to most industry-standard optical systems, without compromising on accuracy. Novel signal processing and computer vision algorithms are proposed to determine motion patterns of interest from infrared and depth data. In order to demonstrate the proposed framework’s suitability for rehabilitation, we developed a gait analysis application that depends on the underlying motion capture sub-system. Each subject’s individual kinematics parameters, which are unique to that subject, are calculated and these are stored for monitoring individual progress of the clinical therapy. Experiments were conducted on 14 different subjects, 5 healthy and 9 stroke survivors. The results show very close agreement of the resulting relevant joint angles with a 12-camera based VICON system, a mean error of at most 1.75% in detecting gait events w.r.t the manually generated ground-truth, and significant performance improvements in terms of accuracy and execution time compared to a previous Kinect-based system

    Grounding semantics in robots for Visual Question Answering

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    In this thesis I describe an operational implementation of an object detection and description system that incorporates in an end-to-end Visual Question Answering system and evaluated it on two visual question answering datasets for compositional language and elementary visual reasoning

    Mobile Robot Navigation for Person Following in Indoor Environments

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    Service robotics is a rapidly growing area of interest in robotics research. Service robots inhabit human-populated environments and carry out specific tasks. The goal of this dissertation is to develop a service robot capable of following a human leader around populated indoor environments. A classification system for person followers is proposed such that it clearly defines the expected interaction between the leader and the robotic follower. In populated environments, the robot needs to be able to detect and identify its leader and track the leader through occlusions, a common characteristic of populated spaces. An appearance-based person descriptor, which augments the Kinect skeletal tracker, is developed and its performance in detecting and overcoming short and long-term leader occlusions is demonstrated. While following its leader, the robot has to ensure that it does not collide with stationary and moving obstacles, including other humans, in the environment. This requirement necessitates the use of a systematic navigation algorithm. A modified version of navigation function path planning, called the predictive fields path planner, is developed. This path planner models the motion of obstacles, uses a simplified representation of practical workspaces, and generates bounded, stable control inputs which guide the robot to its desired position without collisions with obstacles. The predictive fields path planner is experimentally verified on a non-person follower system and then integrated into the robot navigation module of the person follower system. To navigate the robot, it is necessary to localize it within its environment. A mapping approach based on depth data from the Kinect RGB-D sensor is used in generating a local map of the environment. The map is generated by combining inter-frame rotation and translation estimates based on scan generation and dead reckoning respectively. Thus, a complete mobile robot navigation system for person following in indoor environments is presented

    Contribuciones al uso de marcadores para Navegación Autónoma y Realidad Aumentada

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    Square planar markers are a widely used tools for localization and tracking due to their low cost and high performance. Many applications in Robotics, Unmanned Vehicles and Augmented Reality employ these markers for camera pose estimation with high accuracy. Nevertheless, marker-based systems are affected by several factors that limit their performance. First, the marker detection process is a time-consuming task, which is intensified as the image size increases. As a consequence, the current high-resolution cameras has weakened the processing efficiency of traditional marker systems. Second, marker detection is affected by the presence of noise, blurring and occlusion. The movement of the camera produces image blurriness, generated even by small movements. Furthermore, the marker may be partially or completely occluded in the image, so that it is no longer detected. This thesis deals with the above limitations, proposing novel methodologies and strategies for successful marker detection improving both the efficiency and robustness of these systems. First, a novel multi-scale approach has been developed to speed up the marker detection process. The method takes advantage of the different resolutions at which the image is represented to predict at runtime the optimal scale for detection and identification, as well as following a corner upsampling strategy necessary for an accurate pose estimation. Second, we introduce a new marker design, Fractal Marker, which using a novel keypoint-based method achieves detection even under severe occlusion, while allowing detection over a wider range of distance than traditional markers. Finally, we propose a new marker detection strategy based on Discriminative Correlation Filters (DCF), where the marker and its corners represented in the frequency domain perform more robust and faster detections than state-ofthe- art methods, even under extreme blur conditions.Los marcadores planos cuadrados son una de las herramientas ampliamente utilizadas para la localización y el tracking debido a su bajo coste y su alto rendimiento. Muchas aplicaciones en Robótica, Vehículos no Tripulados y Realidad Aumentada emplean estos marcadores para estimar con alta precisión la posición de la cámara. Sin embargo, los sistemas basados en marcadores se ven afectados por varios factores que limitan su rendimiento. En primer lugar, el proceso de detección de marcadores es una tarea que requiere mucho tiempo y este incrementa a medida que aumenta el tamaño de la imagen. En consecuencia, las actuales cámaras de alta resolución han debilitado la eficacia del procesamiento de los sistemas de marcadores tradicionales. Por otra parte, la detección de marcadores se ve afectada por la presencia de ruido, desenfoque y oclusión. El movimiento de la cámara produce desenfoque de la imagen, generado incluso por pequeños movimientos. Además, el marcador puede aparecer en la imagen parcial o completamente ocluido, dejando de ser detectado. Esta tesis aborda las limitaciones anteriores, proponiendo metodologías y estrategias novedosas para la correcta detección de marcadores, mejorando así tanto la eficiencia como la robustez de estos sistemas. En primer lugar, se ha desarrollado un novedoso enfoque multiescala para acelerar el proceso de detección de marcadores. El método aprovecha las diferentes resoluciones en las que la imagen está representada para predecir en tiempo de ejecución la escala óptima para la detección e identificación, a la vez que sigue una estrategia de upsampling de las esquinas necesaria para estimar la pose con precisión. En segundo lugar, introducimos un nuevo diseño de marcador, Fractal Marker, que, mediante un método basado en keypoints, logra detecciones incluso en casos de oclusión extrema, al tiempo que permite la detección en un rango de distancias más amplio que los marcadores tradicionales. Por último, proponemos una nueva estrategia de detección de marcadores basada en Discriminate Correlation Filters (DCF), donde el marcador y sus esquinas representadas en el dominio de la frecuencia realizan detecciones más robustas y rápidas que los métodos de referencia, incluso bajo condiciones extremas de emborronamiento
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