Determining the 3-D Motion of a Rigid Surface Patch without Correspondence, under Pedrspective Projection. I. Planar Surfaces. II. Curved Surfaces,

Abstract

A method is presented for the recovery of the 3D motion parameters of a rigidly moving textured surface. The novelty of the method is based on the following two facts: 1) no point-to-point correspondences are used, and 2) 'stereo' and 'motion' are combined in such a way that no correspondence between the left and the right stereo pairs is required. An important problem in Computer Vision is to recover the 3-D motion of a moving object form its successive images. Dynamic visual information can be produced by a sensor moving through the environment and/or by independently moving objects in the observer's visual field. The interpretation of such dynamic imagery information information consists of dynamics segmentation, recovery of the 3-D motion (of the sensor and the objects in the environment) as well as determination of the structure of the environmental world. The results of such an interpretation can be used to control behavior as for example in robotics, tracking, and autonomous navigation.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Dec 01, 1985
Accession Number
ADA179410

Entities

People

  • Isidore Rigoutsos
  • John Y. Aloimonos

Organizations

  • University of Rochester

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Air Platforms
  • Autonomy

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Angular Momentum
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Collision Avoidance
  • Computational Science
  • Computations
  • Computer Science
  • Computer Vision
  • Coordinate Systems
  • Eigenvalues
  • Equations
  • Flow Fields
  • Linear Algebra
  • Linear Systems
  • Molecular Mechanics Methods
  • Moment Of Inertia
  • Three Dimensional
  • Two Dimensional

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

  • Control Systems Engineering.
  • Neural Network Machine Learning.
  • Robotics and Automation.

Technology Areas

  • AI & ML
  • AI & ML - Autonomous Systems
  • Autonomy