Abstract This work employs a fish-eye to scan cityscapes along a street and register scenes in a compact scene tunnel image. A fish-eye has complete field of view along a route. We mount the fish-eye camera on a vehicle and estimate its pose initially with respect to the vehicle by referring to 3D structure lines of such as roads and buildings on a street. Sampling curves are then allocated in the image frame for dynamic scanning route scenes as the vehicle moves forward. The accurate alignment of the curves ensures less distortion of shapes in the scene tunnel image. We also analyze the scanned results and evaluate alignments of the sampling curves to improve the scanning. The resulting scene tunnel is a continuous archive of the entire route in a city, which can be used for environment visualization and assessment, Internet based virtual navigation, city information indexing, etc.
Employing a Fish-Eye for Scene Tunnel Scanning
Computer Vision – ACCV 2006 ; 4 ; 509-518
Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 3851 , 4
2006-01-01
10 pages
Article/Chapter (Book)
Electronic Resource
English
Point Spread Function , Structure Line , Multiple Camera , Sampling Curve , Vanishing Point Computer Science , Computer Imaging, Vision, Pattern Recognition and Graphics , Pattern Recognition , Image Processing and Computer Vision , Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics) , Algorithm Analysis and Problem Complexity
Employing a Fish-Eye for Scene Tunnel Scanning
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