6533b7d3fe1ef96bd1260c1a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

IMAGE-BASED MODELING TECHNIQUES FOR ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE 3D DIGITALIZATION: LIMITS AND POTENTIALITIES

C. SantagatiC. SantagatiL. InzerilloL. InzerilloF. Di PaolaF. Di Paola

subject

lcsh:Applied optics. PhotonicsImage-based modeling 3D reconstruction Architectural Heritage Computer Vision Laser scanninglcsh:TComputer sciencebusiness.industry3D reconstructionlcsh:TA1501-1820Cloud computingObject (computer science)lcsh:TechnologyField (computer science)Documentationlcsh:TA1-2040Feature (computer vision)Computer graphics (images)Settore ICAR/17 - Disegnolcsh:Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)business

description

Abstract. 3D reconstruction from images has undergone a revolution in the last few years. Computer vision techniques use photographs from data set collection to rapidly build detailed 3D models. The simultaneous applications of different algorithms (MVS), the different techniques of image matching, feature extracting and mesh optimization are inside an active field of research in computer vision. The results are promising: the obtained models are beginning to challenge the precision of laser-based reconstructions. Among all the possibilities we can mainly distinguish desktop and web-based packages. Those last ones offer the opportunity to exploit the power of cloud computing in order to carry out a semi-automatic data processing, thus allowing the user to fulfill other tasks on its computer; whereas desktop systems employ too much processing time and hard heavy approaches. Computer vision researchers have explored many applications to verify the visual accuracy of 3D model but the approaches to verify metric accuracy are few and no one is on Autodesk 123D Catch applied on Architectural Heritage Documentation. Our approach to this challenging problem is to compare the 3Dmodels by Autodesk 123D Catch and 3D models by terrestrial LIDAR considering different object size, from the detail (capitals, moldings, bases) to large scale buildings for practitioner purpose.

10.5194/isprsarchives-xl-5-w2-555-2013http://hdl.handle.net/10447/91794