128 research outputs found

    Geometric uncertainty models for correspondence problems in digital image processing

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    Many recent advances in technology rely heavily on the correct interpretation of an enormous amount of visual information. All available sources of visual data (e.g. cameras in surveillance networks, smartphones, game consoles) must be adequately processed to retrieve the most interesting user information. Therefore, computer vision and image processing techniques gain significant interest at the moment, and will do so in the near future. Most commonly applied image processing algorithms require a reliable solution for correspondence problems. The solution involves, first, the localization of corresponding points -visualizing the same 3D point in the observed scene- in the different images of distinct sources, and second, the computation of consistent geometric transformations relating correspondences on scene objects. This PhD presents a theoretical framework for solving correspondence problems with geometric features (such as points and straight lines) representing rigid objects in image sequences of complex scenes with static and dynamic cameras. The research focuses on localization uncertainty due to errors in feature detection and measurement, and its effect on each step in the solution of a correspondence problem. Whereas most other recent methods apply statistical-based models for spatial localization uncertainty, this work considers a novel geometric approach. Localization uncertainty is modeled as a convex polygonal region in the image space. This model can be efficiently propagated throughout the correspondence finding procedure. It allows for an easy extension toward transformation uncertainty models, and to infer confidence measures to verify the reliability of the outcome in the correspondence framework. Our procedure aims at finding reliable consistent transformations in sets of few and ill-localized features, possibly containing a large fraction of false candidate correspondences. The evaluation of the proposed procedure in practical correspondence problems shows that correct consistent correspondence sets are returned in over 95% of the experiments for small sets of 10-40 features contaminated with up to 400% of false positives and 40% of false negatives. The presented techniques prove to be beneficial in typical image processing applications, such as image registration and rigid object tracking

    Transformations Based on Continuous Piecewise-Affine Velocity Fields

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    A global solution to sparse correspondence problems

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    Non-isometric 3D shape registration.

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    3D shape registration is an important task in computer graphics and computer vision. It has been widely used in the area of film industry, 3D animation, video games and AR/VR assets creation. Manually creating the 3D model of a character from scratch is tedious and time consuming, and it can only be completed by professional trained artists. With the development of 3D geometry acquisition technology, it becomes easier and cheaper to capture high-resolution and highly detailed 3D geometries. However, the scanned data are often incomplete or noisy and therefore cannot be employed directly. To deal with the above two problems, one typical and efficient solution is to deform an existing high-quality model (template) to fit the scanned data (target). Shape registration as an essential technique to do so has been arousing intensive attention. In last decades, various shape registration approaches have been proposed for accurate template fitting. However, there are still some remaining challenges. It is well known that the template can be largely different with the target in respect of size and pose. With the large (usually non-isometric) deformation between them, the shear distortion can easily occur, which may lead to poor results, such as degenerated triangles, fold-overs. Before deforming the template towards the target, reliable correspondences between them should be found first. Incorrect correspondences give the wrong deformation guidance, which can also easily produce fold-overs. As mentioned before, the target always comes with noise. This is the part we want to filter out and try not to fit the template on it. Hence, non-isometric shape registration robust to noise is highly desirable in the scene of geometry modelling from the scanned data. In this PhD research, we address existing challenges in shape registration, including how to prevent the deformation distortion, how to reduce the foldover occurrence and how to deal with the noise in the target. Novel methods including consistent as-similar as-possible surface deformation and robust Huber-L1 surface registration are proposed, which are validated through experimental comparison with state-of-the-arts. The deformation technique plays an important role in shape registration. In this research, a consistent as similar-as-possible (CASAP) surface deformation approach is proposed. Starting from investigating the continuous deformation energy, we analyse the existing term to make the discrete energy converge to the continuous one, whose property we called as energy consistency. Based on the deformation method, a novel CASAP non-isometric surface registration method is proposed. The proposed registration method well preserves the angles of triangles in the template surface so that least distortion is introduced during the surface deformation and thus reduce the risk of fold-over and self-intersection. To reduce the noise influence, a Huber-L1 based non-isometric surface registration is proposed, where a Huber-L1 regularized model constrained on the transformation variation and position difference. The proposed method is robust to noise and produces piecewise smooth results while still preserving fine details on the target. We evaluate and validate our methods through extensive experiments, whose results have demonstrated that the proposed methods in this thesis are more accurate and robust to noise in comparison of the state-of-the arts and enable us to produce high quality models with little efforts

    An extensive English language bibliography on graph theory and its applications, supplement 1

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    Graph theory and its applications - bibliography, supplement

    Applications of monodromy in solving polynomial systems

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    Polynomial systems of equations that occur in applications frequently have a special structure. Part of that structure can be captured by an associated Galois/monodromy group. This makes numerical homotopy continuation methods that exploit this monodromy action an attractive choice for solving these systems; by contrast, other symbolic-numeric techniques do not generally see this structure. Naturally, there are trade-offs when monodromy is chosen over other methods. Nevertheless, there is a growing literature demonstrating that the trade can be worthwhile in practice. In this thesis, we consider a framework for efficient monodromy computation which rivals the state-of-the-art in homotopy continuation methods. We show how its implementation in the package MonodromySolver can be used to efficiently solve challenging systems of polynomial equations. Among many applications, we apply monodromy to computer vision---specifically, the study and classification of minimal problems used in RANSAC-based 3D reconstruction pipelines. As a byproduct of numerically computing their Galois/monodromy groups, we observe that several of these problems have a decomposition into algebraic subproblems. Although precise knowledge of such a decomposition is hard to obtain in general, we determine it in some novel cases.Ph.D
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