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3D Computer Vision
Christian Wöhler
其他書名
Efficient Methods and Applications
出版
Springer Science & Business Media
, 2009-07-28
主題
Computers / Artificial Intelligence / Computer Vision & Pattern Recognition
Computers / Software Development & Engineering / Computer Graphics
Computers / Computer Simulation
Computers / Interactive & Multimedia
Computers / Software Development & Engineering / General
Computers / Optical Data Processing
Computers / Design, Graphics & Media / Graphics Tools
ISBN
3642017320
9783642017322
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=sfxDAAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
This work provides an introduction to the foundations of three-dimensional c- puter vision and describes recent contributions to the ?eld, which are of methodical and application-speci?c nature. Each chapter of this work provides an extensive overview of the corresponding state of the art, into which a detailed description of new methods or evaluation results in application-speci?c systems is embedded. Geometric approaches to three-dimensional scene reconstruction (cf. Chapter 1) are primarily based on the concept of bundle adjustment, which has been developed more than 100 years ago in the domain of photogrammetry. The three-dimensional scene structure and the intrinsic and extrinsic camera parameters are determined such that the Euclidean backprojection error in the image plane is minimised, u- ally relying on a nonlinear optimisation procedure. In the ?eld of computer vision, an alternative framework based on projective geometry has emerged during the last two decades, which allows to use linear algebra techniques for three-dimensional scene reconstructionand camera calibration purposes. With special emphasis on the problems of stereo image analysis and camera calibration, these fairly different - proaches are related to each other in the presented work, and their advantages and drawbacks are stated. In this context, various state-of-the-artcamera calibration and self-calibration methods as well as recent contributions towards automated camera calibration systems are described. An overview of classical and new feature-based, correlation-based, dense, and spatio-temporal methods for establishing point c- respondences between pairs of stereo images is given.