places the operator will contain a complex array of
sensors and decision elements.
The automation problem is further complicated by
the nature of the input information, the image detail
on the aerial photographs. The principal difficulty
here is with the natural scene rather than with the
recording system. Modern aerial-camera systems and
photographic films are capable of recording an im-
mense amount of image detail—-on the order of 10%
elements per square millimeter. However, the quan-
tity and characteristics of the information available
for recording vary greatly within an average scene. As
a result, the photographs typically contain a number
of areas that are difficult to interpret because the
image detail exhibits low contrast or high density. To
maintain an established level of performance, the
instrument operator must adapt to these situations,
perhaps by varying his plotting speed, or by interpo-
lating over larger or smaller image areas, or simply by
changing his level of concentration on the stereoper-
ception task. To achieve a reasonable level of inde-
pendence from the characteristics of the photograph,
the automated system must possess similar adaptive
capabilities.
In view of the variety and complexity of the tasks
performed by the instrument operator, it is perhaps
not surprising that no effective means have been de-
veloped for completely automating his functions.
However, substantial progress has been made with
systems which provide partial automation by relieving
the operator of the more routine and mechanical
tasks. A major advance in this area was made in 1958
by G. L. Hobrough, then of Hunting Associates
Limited, Toronto, Canada, who successfully applied
electronic scanning and correlation techniques to
provide automatic stereoperception for a projection
stereoplotter. Initial demonstrations of automatic
profiling and contouring were also performed by
Hobrough, using analog computing and control equip-
ment in conjunction with the plotter. 12
Starting in 1963, an automatic plotting system for
the analytical stereoplotters was developed at Bendix
Research Laboratories. In this system, described in
the body of this paper, a high degree of automation
has been achieved for the stereoperception and plot-
ting functions, using electronic scanning and correla-
tion techniques similar to those developed by
Hobrough and expanding the functions of the control
computer. The availability of the stored-program
control computer has also enabled significant ad-
vances in automating overall control functions and in
providing the system adaptivity required to handle
difficult photographic and terrain conditions.
Several automated analytical stereoplotters are
currently in service. In most situations, instruments
have demonstrated a level of accuracy comparable to
that of the manually operated analytical plotters.
However, experience with these instruments has
pointed to several areas of potential improvement in
automatic stereoperception and plotting. These areas,
along with several possibilities for expanding the over-
all system capabilities, are discussed in a subsequent
section of this paper.
Automation of the photointerpretation function
by pattern-recognition techniques, an area of con-
siderable recent research activity, is not discussed in
detail in this paper, since it is the subject of another
paper in this volume.* However, the potential appli-
cations for these techniques in relation to automatic
plotting are noted in the conclusions.
AUTOMATIC STEREOPERCEPTION
In performing stereoperception, the operator
senses any deviation in the position of the reference
mark with respect to the apparent terrain surface and
introduces the corrections required to place the mark
in contact with the surface. Referred to the photo-
graphs, this operation implies that conjugate imagery
on the two photographs is matched (that is, adjusted
to remove any relative X-Y displacement) at the
optical axis which corresponds to the reference mark.
Thus, a system which performs automatic stereoper-
ception must be capable of examining the imagery on
each photograph at or near the optical axis, generat-
ing error signals indicating any matching errors, and
introducing the corrections required to remove these
errors. These operations, of course, must be inde-
pendent of which point in the stereomodel is being
examined, or what type of image detail happens to be
present on the photographs.
A block diagram of the system which pertorms the
automatic stereoperception function for the auto-
mated analytical stereoplotters is shown in Figure 1.
The image correlation system—which consists of a
Scan Video
Scan Signals Flying-Spot Signals Video
Generator Scanners Correlator
Viewer
: Cross- Correlation,
Sen Se Parallax Errors,
an ape Photograph Slope Errors
Motions
Control
Computer
Figure 1 Automatic Stereoperception System—
Functional Organization
*R. M. Centner and E. D. Hietanen, Automatic Pattern Recogni-
tion Techniques for Photographic Analysis."
CHAPELLE, WHITESIDE, AND BYBEE
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