4.3 How Well Does the
Criteria?
Instrument Meet Design
A) Time to record: Cameras are easily timed to
record in less than 0.1 seconds. This criterion is
easily satisfied with the conventional two camera
approach.
B) Output of results: Results are presently
displayed using contours. Digital surface model
matching has not yet been incorporated into the
software.
C) Reliability: The reliability of matching obtained
in the test was surprisingly high by both approaches,
largely due to the robustness of the least squares
matching procedure, using the selected run-time
parameters. If the method fails it will usually be
only in the vicinity of areas in the vicinity of
hair, eyebrows, eyes, and so on, which are not
relevant to the practitioner nor to surface model
matching. It may fail in the vicinity of steep
slopes around the nose, or at eyebrows or eyes, but
again what is relevant to the practitioner is the
soft tissue around the cheeks, chin and forehead and
as such disruptions to the smooth skin and steep
slopes need not be a problem, especially if digital
surface matching is to be used. A surface measuring
system must be capable of coping with different skin
types and colours, a matter which remains
undetermined in this case.
D) Convenience: The operation has so far been fully
automatic in all modes, owing largely to the
selection of parameters appropriate to the surface in
question. The instrument will operate in a normally
lit room.
E) Accuracy: Current accuracy as estimated from the
tests as described above is adequate for the
particular uses expected to generate significant
demand.
F) Resolution: The levels of resolution which have
been achieved - see Table 1 - are adequate for the
anticipated uses.
G) Cost: The hardware required for the current
instrumentation comprises the cameras, the
illumination and texturisation apparatus (specially
fabricated), a typically-configured PC with VGA
screen for image display, frame-grabbers boards and
a separate monitor for the cameras. Proprietary
software is used for surface contouring and display.
H) Computation Speed: Considerable programming
effort has been devoted to ensuring a short and
probably acceptable computation time, although not
strictly real time.
ani =
Wl E.
a
Figure 2: 1 mm contours of part of abdomen, based
on 421 points, as determined using symmetry
detection followed by least squares matching.
I) Safety: The procedure is safe, and moreover,
using digital surface model matching avoids the need
for control points or fixing the patient with respect
to cephelostats, for example, and makes the method
comfortable for the patient.
This instrument may be compared to recent similar,
digital photogrammetric approaches to bio-medical
measurement, e.g. by Grün & Baltsavias (1988),
Trinder et ai. (1990), and Deacon et al.
(1991), and to active triangulation approaches, e.g.
Frobin & Hierholzer (1991). However, these
approaches all differ in the way they meet the
criteria mentioned above, and the task of the
comparison becomes difficult and is perhaps not
constructive. As no body surface measuring devices
are used in the health services of the local region
at present, it seems reasonable to foresee use by the
medical practitioners with whom the writer has been
in contact.
Figure 3: 1 mm contours of a human face, derived
from 736 points.
5. CONCLUSIONS
The paper provides a brief case-study of a device
which is capable of determining bio-medical soft
tissue surface shapes, which operates reliably and
without operator intervention, and which has been
brought to operating level. A feature of the system
may be its simplicity: it has been surprising what
could be achieved with a ordinary PC, although with
extensive programming effort in image processing and
with carefully chosen run-time parameters. The
difficult facets of the development have not been
seen as achieving precision from the least squares
matching but achieving reliability and an acceptable
speed.
The projected texturising grid pattern facilitates
target searching, and least squares image matching
does not suffer. However, target detection can be a
slow procedure because of the volume of image
processing and judicious selection of an appropriate
strategy can be crucial. Different levels of
resolution have been found possible: speed can be
achieved at the expense of resolution. Low
resolution is seen to be suited to a number of
medical applications, especially as it provides a
surface model little different from the high
resolution models for limbs and backs.
Hardware and software development will continue, to
advance accuracy, reliability, resolution, coverage
and speed. All hardware components must be
thoroughly calibrated. Digital surface model
matching must become an integral part of the device.
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