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a) left original image
c) disparity map ( dark = far from camera,
light = near to camera)
Fig. 2: Correspondence analysis of image pair
tains the combined quality measure C, for each can-
didate. Fig. 2 demonstrates the correspondence ana-
lysis for an image pair of the sequence "house". The
image sequence "house" consists of a series of 90
views of the house where the house is rotated 4 de-
grees around the vertical axis in each view. The cam-
eras are displaced 15 mm in horizontal direction with
parallel optical axes and the house is placed approxi-
mately 400 mm from the camera origin. Fig. 2a and
b show the left and right input image, Fig. 2c the dis-
parity map and Fig. 2d the corresponding confidence
map. Black regions are regions where no disparity
could be measured. The measured disparity values
are between 30 and 50 pixel. It can be seen that some
regions in the area of the roof have false disparity
values. This areas correspond to regions with low
confidence because no surface structure is available
to uniquely select a candidate.
Scene segmentation
The correspondence analysis yields a disparity map
based on local depth measurement only. These mea-
surements are uncertain and must be merged to re-
gions that describe physical object surfaces. Based
on similarity measures of scene depth the segmenta-
b) right original image
d) confidence map ( dark = low confidence,
light = high confidence)
"house".
tion divides the viewed scene into contiguous sur-
faces and merges all disparity measurements of one
object surface. The object boundaries are corrected
from the grey level image with a contour approxima-
tion by assuming that physical object boundaries
most often create grey level edges in the image.
Once the depth map is segmented into object regions
all measurements of one region are interpolated by a
thin plate surface model that calculates the best qua-
dratic surface approximation of the disparity map
based on the uncertain depth measures. A multi grid
surface reconstruction algorithm described by [Terzo-
poulos,1988] was chosen to calculate the interpola-
tion with a finite element approximation. The interpo-
lation fils out gaps in areas where no disparity
calculation is possible. The process of segmentation
and model building is shown in Fig. 3 for a pair of the
image sequence "house". In Fig.3a the segmentation
of the object "house" is marked grey, the residual
background is marked white. Black regions are areas
that cannot be analyzed at all because these areas
are visible in one camera only. Fig. 3b displays the
interpolated disparity map of the object house that is
converted into a depth map for model building.The
segmentation could be improved if not only the outer
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