scholarly journals Rotational Kinematics Model Based Adaptive Particle Filter for Robust Human Tracking in Thermal Omnidirectional Vision

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Yazhe Tang ◽  
Jun Luo ◽  
Y. F. Li ◽  
Xiaolong Zhou

This paper presents a novel surveillance system named thermal omnidirectional vision (TOV) system which can work in total darkness with a wild field of view. Different to the conventional thermal vision sensor, the proposed vision system exhibits serious nonlinear distortion due to the effect of the quadratic mirror. To effectively model the inherent distortion of omnidirectional vision, an equivalent sphere projection is employed to adaptively calculate parameterized distorted neighborhood of an object in the image plane. With the equivalent projection based adaptive neighborhood calculation, a distortion-invariant gradient coding feature is proposed for thermal catadioptric vision. For robust tracking purpose, a rotational kinematic modeled adaptive particle filter is proposed based on the characteristic of omnidirectional vision, which can handle multiple movements effectively, including the rapid motions. Finally, the experiments are given to verify the performance of the proposed algorithm for human tracking in TOV system.

2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 643-645 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei ZENG ◽  
Gui-bin ZHU ◽  
Jie CHEN ◽  
Ding-ding TANG

Author(s):  
Mohammad Hossein Ghaeminia ◽  
Amir Hossein Shabani ◽  
Shahryar Baradaran Shokouhi

Author(s):  
M. Alizadeh ◽  
C. Ratanasawanya ◽  
M. Mehrandezh ◽  
R. Paranjape

A vision-based servoing technique is proposed for a 2 degrees-of-freedom (dof) model helicopter equipped with a monocular vision system. In general, these techniques can be categorized as image- and position-based, where the task error is defined in the image plane in the former and in the physical space in the latter. The 2-dof model helicopter requires a configuration-dependent feed-forward control to compensate for gravitational forces when servoing on a ground target. Therefore, a position-based visual servoing deems more appropriate for precision control. Image information collected from a ground object, with known geometry a priori, is used to calculate the desired pose of the camera and correspondingly the desired joint angles of the model helicopter. To assure a smooth servoing, the task error is parameterized, using the information obtained from the linearaized image Jacobian, and time scaled to form a moving reference trajectory. At the higher level, a Linear Quadratic Regulator (LQR), augmented with a feed-forward term and an integrator, is used to track this trajectory. The discretization of the reference trajectory is achieved by an error-clamping strategy for optimal performance. The proposed technique was tested on a 2-dof model helicopter capable of pitch and yaw maneuvers carrying a light-weight off-the-shelf video camera. The test results show that the optimized controller can servo the model helicopter to a hovering pose for an image acquisition rate of as low as 2 frames per second.


Author(s):  
Jesús Martínez del Rincón ◽  
Jean-Christophe Nebel ◽  
Dimitrios Makris

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document