6533b85afe1ef96bd12b8b63
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Rotation estimation and vanishing point extraction by omnidirectional vision in urban environment
Jean-charles BazinPascal VasseurIn So KweonCédric Demonceauxsubject
0209 industrial biotechnologyAutomatic controlComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION02 engineering and technologyTranslation (geometry)020901 industrial engineering & automationOrthogonalityomnidirectional visionArtificial IntelligenceMotion estimation11. Sustainability0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering[INFO.INFO-RB]Computer Science [cs]/Robotics [cs.RO]Computer visionElectrical and Electronic EngineeringVanishing pointrotation estimationMathematicsbusiness.industryApplied MathematicsMechanical EngineeringPerspective (graphical)3D reconstruction[ INFO.INFO-RB ] Computer Science [cs]/Robotics [cs.RO]vanishing pointscatadioptric visionModeling and Simulation020201 artificial intelligence & image processingArtificial intelligencebusinessparallel linesRotation (mathematics)Softwaredescription
International audience; Rotation estimation is a fundamental step for various robotic applications such as automatic control of ground/aerial vehicles, motion estimation and 3D reconstruction. However it is now well established that traditional navigation equipments, such as global positioning systems (GPSs) or inertial measurement units (IMUs), suffer from several disadvantages. Hence, some vision-based works have been proposed recently. Whereas interesting results can be obtained, the existing methods have non-negligible limitations such as a difficult feature matching (e.g. repeated textures, blur or illumination changes) and a high computational cost (e.g. analyze in the frequency domain). Moreover, most of them utilize conventional perspective cameras and thus have a limited field of view. In order to overcome these limitations, in this paper we present a novel rotation estimation approach based on the extraction of vanishing points in omnidirectional images. The first advantage is that our rotation estimation is decoupled from the translation computation, which accelerates the execution time and results in a better control solution. This is made possible by our complete framework dedicated to omnidirectional vision, whereas conventional vision has a rotation/translation ambiguity. Second, we propose a top-down approach which maintains the important constraint of vanishing point orthogonality by inverting the problem: instead of performing a difficult line clustering preliminary step, we directly search for the orthogonal vanishing points. Finally, experimental results on various data sets for diverse robotic applications have demonstrated that our novel framework is accurate, robust, maintains the orthogonality of the vanishing points and can run in real-time.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-01-01 |