5,252 research outputs found
Temporally coherent 4D reconstruction of complex dynamic scenes
This paper presents an approach for reconstruction of 4D temporally coherent
models of complex dynamic scenes. No prior knowledge is required of scene
structure or camera calibration allowing reconstruction from multiple moving
cameras. Sparse-to-dense temporal correspondence is integrated with joint
multi-view segmentation and reconstruction to obtain a complete 4D
representation of static and dynamic objects. Temporal coherence is exploited
to overcome visual ambiguities resulting in improved reconstruction of complex
scenes. Robust joint segmentation and reconstruction of dynamic objects is
achieved by introducing a geodesic star convexity constraint. Comparative
evaluation is performed on a variety of unstructured indoor and outdoor dynamic
scenes with hand-held cameras and multiple people. This demonstrates
reconstruction of complete temporally coherent 4D scene models with improved
nonrigid object segmentation and shape reconstruction.Comment: To appear in The IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern
Recognition (CVPR) 2016 . Video available at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bm_P13_-Ds
Temporally Coherent General Dynamic Scene Reconstruction
Existing techniques for dynamic scene reconstruction from multiple
wide-baseline cameras primarily focus on reconstruction in controlled
environments, with fixed calibrated cameras and strong prior constraints. This
paper introduces a general approach to obtain a 4D representation of complex
dynamic scenes from multi-view wide-baseline static or moving cameras without
prior knowledge of the scene structure, appearance, or illumination.
Contributions of the work are: An automatic method for initial coarse
reconstruction to initialize joint estimation; Sparse-to-dense temporal
correspondence integrated with joint multi-view segmentation and reconstruction
to introduce temporal coherence; and a general robust approach for joint
segmentation refinement and dense reconstruction of dynamic scenes by
introducing shape constraint. Comparison with state-of-the-art approaches on a
variety of complex indoor and outdoor scenes, demonstrates improved accuracy in
both multi-view segmentation and dense reconstruction. This paper demonstrates
unsupervised reconstruction of complete temporally coherent 4D scene models
with improved non-rigid object segmentation and shape reconstruction and its
application to free-viewpoint rendering and virtual reality.Comment: Submitted to IJCV 2019. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap
with arXiv:1603.0338
Review of the mathematical foundations of data fusion techniques in surface metrology
The recent proliferation of engineered surfaces, including freeform and structured surfaces, is challenging current metrology techniques. Measurement using multiple sensors has been proposed to achieve enhanced benefits, mainly in terms of spatial frequency bandwidth, which a single sensor cannot provide. When using data from different sensors, a process of data fusion is required and there is much active research in this area. In this paper, current data fusion methods and applications are reviewed, with a focus on the mathematical foundations of the subject. Common research questions in the fusion of surface metrology data are raised and potential fusion algorithms are discussed
Learning to Transform Time Series with a Few Examples
We describe a semi-supervised regression algorithm that learns to transform one time series into another time series given examples of the transformation. This algorithm is applied to tracking, where a time series of observations from sensors is transformed to a time series describing the pose of a target. Instead of defining and implementing such transformations for each tracking task separately, our algorithm learns a memoryless transformation of time series from a few example input-output mappings. The algorithm searches for a smooth function that fits the training examples and, when applied to the input time series, produces a time series that evolves according to assumed dynamics. The learning procedure is fast and lends itself to a closed-form solution. It is closely related to nonlinear system identification and manifold learning techniques. We demonstrate our algorithm on the tasks of tracking RFID tags from signal strength measurements, recovering the pose of rigid objects, deformable bodies, and articulated bodies from video sequences. For these tasks, this algorithm requires significantly fewer examples compared to fully-supervised regression algorithms or semi-supervised learning algorithms that do not take the dynamics of the output time series into account
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Image-Based 3D Photography Using Opacity Hulls
We have built a system for acquiring and displaying high quality graphical models of objects that are impossible to scan with traditional scanners. Our system can acquire highly specular and fuzzy materials, such as fur and feathers. The hardware set-up consists of a turntable, two plasma displays, an array of cameras, and a rotating array of directional lights. We use multi-background matting techniques to acquire alpha mattes of the object from multiple viewpoints. The alpha mattes are used to construct an opacity hull. The opacity hull is a new shape representation, defined as the visual hull of the object with view-dependent opacity. It enables visualization of complex object silhouettes and seamless blending of objects into new environments. Our system also supports relighting of objects with arbitrary appearance using surface reflectance fields, a purely image-based appearance representation. Our system is the first to acquire and render surface reflectance fields under varying illumination from arbitrary viewpoints. We have built three generations of digitizers with increasing sophistication. In this paper, we present our results from digitizing hundreds of models.Engineering and Applied Science
Marine Heritage Monitoring with High Resolution Survey Tools: ScapaMAP 2001-2006
Archaeologically, marine sites can be just as significant as those on land. Until recently, however, they were not protected in the UK to the same degree, leading to degradation of sites; the difficulty of investigating such sites still makes it problematic and expensive to properly describe, schedule and monitor them. Use of conventional high-resolution survey tools in an archaeological context is changing the economic structure of such investigations however, and it is now possible to remotely but routinely monitor the state of submerged cultural artifacts. Use of such data to optimize expenditure of expensive and rare assets (e.g., divers and on-bottom dive time) is an added bonus. We present here the results of an investigation into methods for monitoring of marine heritage sites, using the remains of the Imperial German Navy (scuttled 1919) in Scapa Flow, Orkney as a case study. Using a baseline bathymetric survey in 2001 and a repeat bathymetric and volumetric survey in 2006, we illustrate the requirements for such surveys over and above normal hydrographic protocols and outline strategies for effective imaging of large wrecks. Suggested methods for manipulation of such data (including processing and visualization) are outlined, and we draw the distinction between products for scientific investigation and those for outreach and education, which have very different requirements. We then describe the use of backscatter and volumetric acoustic data in the investigation of wrecks, focusing on the extra information to be gained from them that is not evident in the traditional bathymetric DTM models or sounding point-cloud representations of data. Finally, we consider the utility of high-resolution survey as part of an integrated site management policy, with particular reference to the economics of marine heritage monitoring and preservation
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