A DIGITAL EXTENSION OF
THE AUTOMOBILE COLLISION INVESTIGATION
PHOTOGRAMMETRIC SYSTEM
Wolfgang Faig
Department of Surveying Engineering
University of New Brunswick
Fredericton, N.B., Canada
Tian- Yuan Shih
Department of Civil Engineering
National Chiao-Tung University
Taiwan, R.O.C.
ABSTRACT
A softcopy version of an economic photogrammetric system has been designed. This photogrammetric system
was developed for automobile collision investigations.
In the original film based system, the stereo-cameras
constructed with two non-metric cameras are used to collect the photographic imagery. The photo coordinates are
digitized with a slide-projector and tablet-digitizer combination. In the designed digital system, stereo-cameras are still
used for image gathering. After the films are developed, the "soft" copy of the imageries are gathered with desktop
scanners. With digital imagery, several schemes of different automation levels can be developed. This softcopy
photogrammetric system eliminates the requirement of slide-projector and tablet digitizer. The stability and lighting
condition for the working environment also become less critical.
INTRODUCTION
A photogrammetric system based on the non-
metric stereo-camera approach (Faig & Shih, 1990) has
been constructed for the car collision investigation. This
system follows the analysis model described in Tumbas &
Smith (1988). The only difference is that, instead of tape
measurements, the deformations are measured by
photogrammetric means. After the evaluation with data
sets from real collision cases, this system has been found
to be practical and useful (Faig, Wilson, & Shih, 1992).
Currently, this system is used by several selected Multi-
Disciplinary Accident Investigation teams (MDAI Teams)
across Canada.
After the completion of this photogrammetric
system, further research has been conducted to
investigate its improvements and the extension. After
discussion and idea exchange with transportation
professionals, a digital extension is found to be of general
interest. This paper describes the design and
implementation of this extension. The analogue system
is described first, followed by the digital version. Then,
the scanning process is discussed. Regarding to feature
extraction, there are two directions of development as
well. Both the manual approach and the semi-automated
approach are discussed.
THE ANALOGUE SYSTEM
In the original photogrammetric system, a non-
metric stereo-camera is used for data acquisition. This
stereo-camera is composed of two fixed-focus compact
cameras, a base-bar, a photographic tripod, and two
camera mounts (Figure 1, 2). A slide projector and a
tablet digitizer were utilized for the photogrammetric
measurements. The digitizer is directly linked with a
micro-computer, and all following computations are
performed on this micro-computer as well.
Within the camera, a set of four reference marks
was established by gluing a brass frame onto the lens
cone. In the four corners of this brass frame, tiny
circular holes are drilled. With these reference marks,
interior orientation can be calibrated in the system
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Back of the
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Figure 1: The Stereo-Camera
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Figure 2: The Base Bar