Image Synthesis and Occlusion Removal of Intermediate Views by Stereo Matching

Author(s):  
Seongyun Cho ◽  
JeongMok Ha ◽  
Hong Jeong
2018 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 03053
Author(s):  
Luanhao Lu

Three-dimensional (3D) vision extracted from the stereo images or reconstructed from the two-dimensional (2D) images is the most effective topic in computer vision and video surveillance. Three-dimensional scene is constructed through two stereo images which existing disparity map by Stereo vision. Many methods of Stereo matching which contains median filtering, mean-shift segmentation, guided filter and joint trilateral filters [1] are used in many algorithms to construct the precise disparity map. These methods committed to figure out the image synthesis range in different Stereo matching fields and among these techniques cannot perform perfectly every turn. The paper focuses on 3D vision, introduce the background and process of 3D vision, reviews several classical datasets in the field of 3D vision, based on which the learning approaches and several types of applications of 3D vision were evaluated and analyzed.


1999 ◽  
Vol 19 (Supplement1) ◽  
pp. 87-90
Author(s):  
D. SEKIJIMA ◽  
S. HAYANO ◽  
Y. SAITO ◽  
T.L. KUNII
Keyword(s):  

2009 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 2690-2692
Author(s):  
Bao-hai YANG ◽  
Xiao-li LIU ◽  
Dai-feng ZHA

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 1903
Author(s):  
Zhihui Li ◽  
Jiaxin Liu ◽  
Yang Yang ◽  
Jing Zhang

Objects in satellite remote sensing image sequences often have large deformations, and the stereo matching of this kind of image is so difficult that the matching rate generally drops. A disparity refinement method is needed to correct and fill the disparity. A method for disparity refinement based on the results of plane segmentation is proposed in this paper. The plane segmentation algorithm includes two steps: Initial segmentation based on mean-shift and alpha-expansion-based energy minimization. According to the results of plane segmentation and fitting, the disparity is refined by filling missed matching regions and removing outliers. The experimental results showed that the proposed plane segmentation method could not only accurately fit the plane in the presence of noise but also approximate the surface by plane combination. After the proposed plane segmentation method was applied to the disparity refinement of remote sensing images, many missed matches were filled, and the elevation errors were reduced. This proved that the proposed algorithm was effective. For difficult evaluations resulting from significant variations in remote sensing images of different satellites, the edge matching rate and the edge matching map are proposed as new stereo matching evaluation and analysis tools. Experiment results showed that they were easy to use, intuitive, and effective.


Author(s):  
Simon Casassus ◽  
Matías Vidal ◽  
Carla Arce-Tord ◽  
Clive Dickinson ◽  
Glenn J White ◽  
...  

Abstract Cm-wavelength radio continuum emission in excess of free-free, synchrotron and Rayleigh-Jeans dust emission (excess microwave emission, EME), and often called ‘anomalous microwave emission’, is bright in molecular cloud regions exposed to UV radiation, i.e. in photo-dissociation regions (PDRs). The EME correlates with IR dust emission on degree angular scales. Resolved observations of well-studied PDRs are needed to compare the spectral variations of the cm-continuum with tracers of physical conditions and of the dust grain population. The EME is particularly bright in the regions of the ρ Ophiuchi molecular cloud (ρ Oph) that surround the earliest type star in the complex, HD 147889, where the peak signal stems from the filament known as the ρ Oph-W PDR. Here we report on ATCA observations of ρ Oph-W that resolve the width of the filament. We recover extended emission using a variant of non-parametric image synthesis performed in the sky plane. The multi-frequency 17 GHz to 39 GHz mosaics reveal spectral variations in the cm-wavelength continuum. At ∼30 arcsec resolutions, the 17-20 GHz intensities follow tightly the mid-IR, Icm∝I(8 μm), despite the breakdown of this correlation on larger scales. However, while the 33-39 GHz filament is parallel to IRAC 8 μm, it is offset by 15–20 arcsec towards the UV source. Such morphological differences in frequency reflect spectral variations, which we quantify spectroscopically as a sharp and steepening high-frequency cutoff, interpreted in terms of the spinning dust emission mechanism as a minimum grain size acutoff ∼ 6 ± 1 Å that increases deeper into the PDR.


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