4 CONCLUSION
A method for construction DEM's is presented that allows the
combination of different types of measurements with different
accuracies. The proposed method also provides a measure of
accuracy for every position and allows for sequential addition
of measured points. Foreknowledge in the form of an ex-
isting DEM of (a part of) the examined area can easily be
included. These properties are of specific importance in our
approach to video image sequence analysis, wherein different
types of measurements are obtained. The proposed method
is based on propagation of measurements to any position and
the combination of the thus obtained derived measurements.
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[Cochran, 1992] Cochran, S., Medioni, G. 1992. 3-D surface
description from binocular stereo, IEEE Trans. PAMI, Vol.
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[Guillemin, 1993] Guillemin, Y., Nguyen, H.H., Cohen, P.
1993. Automated aerial cartography from extended se-
quences. Proceedings of the 8th Scandinavian Conference
on Image Analysis SCIA "93, Vol.l, pp. 681-689
[Papoulis, 1984] Papoulis, A. 1984. Probability, Random
Variables, and Stochastic Processes. McGraw-Hill, Inc.
Singapore, ISBN 0-07-Y66456-X
APPENDIX
Propagation of measurements
Assume that for a elevation measurement at position p the
probability distribution function is Normal (Gaussian) around
the measured elevation zp:
G (2p, 05)
fa, (z(p)) — (9)
Furthermore the orientation of the surface is distributed Nor-
mally as:
f^ (7) - G(0,o2)
Then the conditional probability for the elevation at a position
with distance A from p is given by:
(10)
EE) = Gz, A)
(11)
The unconditional probability for the elevation at this position
can be obtained by integrating over all possible elevations at
Zp:
fra (z(p + AJlz(p) = 2p) = fu (3
faa) = | Ferlzp)fralzalap)de (12)
This integral can be solved straightforward and yields:
fra (za) = G(zp, 02 + Aa? (13)
822
Z Axis
o
n J
M N
* (n LEA
x o ahi NA
a N MAU
N PN AN
o
o
o
Oo
os
o
Ax
7
= "000
o
M
0
mo
u
X
4
N
Figure 4: An example of a 3d DEM estimation. From top to
bottom: true landscape surface, estimated landscape surface
and standard deviation of the error. The DEM was recon-
structed using 1000 randomly chosen point feature measure-
ments with different accuracies
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B4. Vienna 1996