8,070 research outputs found
A -adic RanSaC algorithm for stereo vision using Hensel lifting
A -adic variation of the Ran(dom) Sa(mple) C(onsensus) method for solving
the relative pose problem in stereo vision is developped. From two 2-adically
encoded images a random sample of five pairs of corresponding points is taken,
and the equations for the essential matrix are solved by lifting solutions
modulo 2 to the 2-adic integers. A recently devised -adic hierarchical
classification algorithm imitating the known LBG quantisation method classifies
the solutions for all the samples after having determined the number of
clusters using the known intra-inter validity of clusterings. In the successful
case, a cluster ranking will determine the cluster containing a 2-adic
approximation to the "true" solution of the problem.Comment: 15 pages; typos removed, abstract changed, computation error remove
DeMoN: Depth and Motion Network for Learning Monocular Stereo
In this paper we formulate structure from motion as a learning problem. We
train a convolutional network end-to-end to compute depth and camera motion
from successive, unconstrained image pairs. The architecture is composed of
multiple stacked encoder-decoder networks, the core part being an iterative
network that is able to improve its own predictions. The network estimates not
only depth and motion, but additionally surface normals, optical flow between
the images and confidence of the matching. A crucial component of the approach
is a training loss based on spatial relative differences. Compared to
traditional two-frame structure from motion methods, results are more accurate
and more robust. In contrast to the popular depth-from-single-image networks,
DeMoN learns the concept of matching and, thus, better generalizes to
structures not seen during training.Comment: Camera ready version for CVPR 2017. Supplementary material included.
Project page:
http://lmb.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/people/ummenhof/depthmotionnet
Anatomical curve identification
Methods for capturing images in three dimensions are now widely available, with stereo-photogrammetry and laser scanning being two common approaches. In anatomical studies, a number of landmarks are usually identified manually from each of these images and these form the basis of subsequent statistical analysis. However, landmarks express only a very small proportion of the information available from the images. Anatomically defined curves have the advantage of providing a much richer expression of shape. This is explored in the context of identifying the boundary of breasts from an image of the female torso and the boundary of the lips from a facial image. The curves of interest are characterised by ridges or valleys. Key issues in estimation are the ability to navigate across the anatomical surface in three-dimensions, the ability to recognise the relevant boundary and the need to assess the evidence for the presence of the surface feature of interest. The first issue is addressed by the use of principal curves, as an extension of principal components, the second by suitable assessment of curvature and the third by change-point detection. P-spline smoothing is used as an integral part of the methods but adaptations are made to the specific anatomical features of interest. After estimation of the boundary curves, the intermediate surfaces of the anatomical feature of interest can be characterised by surface interpolation. This allows shape variation to be explored using standard methods such as principal components. These tools are applied to a collection of images of women where one breast has been reconstructed after mastectomy and where interest lies in shape differences between the reconstructed and unreconstructed breasts. They are also applied to a collection of lip images where possible differences in shape between males and females are of interest
Cross-calibration of Time-of-flight and Colour Cameras
Time-of-flight cameras provide depth information, which is complementary to
the photometric appearance of the scene in ordinary images. It is desirable to
merge the depth and colour information, in order to obtain a coherent scene
representation. However, the individual cameras will have different viewpoints,
resolutions and fields of view, which means that they must be mutually
calibrated. This paper presents a geometric framework for this multi-view and
multi-modal calibration problem. It is shown that three-dimensional projective
transformations can be used to align depth and parallax-based representations
of the scene, with or without Euclidean reconstruction. A new evaluation
procedure is also developed; this allows the reprojection error to be
decomposed into calibration and sensor-dependent components. The complete
approach is demonstrated on a network of three time-of-flight and six colour
cameras. The applications of such a system, to a range of automatic
scene-interpretation problems, are discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, 3 table
Learning Single-Image Depth from Videos using Quality Assessment Networks
Depth estimation from a single image in the wild remains a challenging
problem. One main obstacle is the lack of high-quality training data for images
in the wild. In this paper we propose a method to automatically generate such
data through Structure-from-Motion (SfM) on Internet videos. The core of this
method is a Quality Assessment Network that identifies high-quality
reconstructions obtained from SfM. Using this method, we collect single-view
depth training data from a large number of YouTube videos and construct a new
dataset called YouTube3D. Experiments show that YouTube3D is useful in training
depth estimation networks and advances the state of the art of single-view
depth estimation in the wild
Effects of inherited structures on inversion tectonics: Examples from the Asturian Basin (NW Iberian Peninsula) interpreted in a Computer Assisted Virtual Environment (CAVE)
Map shows mid-nineteenth century Texas counties, major cities, towns, roads, railroads, and areas of Native American habitation. Includes detailed notes on map. Insets: "Plan of Sabine Lake," "Plan of the Northern Part of Texas," and "Plan of Galveston Bay." Relief shown by hachures. Depths shown by soundings on inset. Scales [ca. 1:2,350,000], [ca. 1: 529,000], [ca. 1:3,800,000], and [ca. 1:887,000]
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