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Close-range imaging, long-range vision

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Bibliographic data

fullscreen: Close-range imaging, long-range vision

Monograph

Persistent identifier:
1067858350
Title:
Close-range imaging, long-range vision
Sub title:
proceedings of the ISPRS Commission V symposium : September 2 - 6, 2002, Corfu, Greece
Scope:
1 Online-Ressource (xii, 621 Seiten)
Year of publication:
2002
Place of publication:
Thessaloniki
Publisher of the original:
Publ. ZITI
Identifier (digital):
1067858350
Illustration:
Illustrationen
Signature of the source:
ZS 312(34,5)
Language:
English
Additional Notes:
Erscheinungsdatum des Originals ist aus dem Copyrightjahr ermittelt.
Usage licence:
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Corporations:
Symposium Close-Range Imaging, Long-Rang Vision, 2002, Kerkira
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Technical Commission Close Range Techniques and Machine Vision
Technikon Epimeltrion ts Hellados (Griechische Kammer der Technik)
Adapter:
Symposium Close-Range Imaging, Long-Rang Vision, 2002, Kerkira
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Technical Commission Close Range Techniques and Machine Vision
Technikon Epimeltrion ts Hellados (Griechische Kammer der Technik)
Founder of work:
Symposium Close-Range Imaging, Long-Rang Vision, 2002, Kerkira
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Technical Commission Close Range Techniques and Machine Vision
Technikon Epimeltrion ts Hellados (Griechische Kammer der Technik)
Other corporate:
Symposium Close-Range Imaging, Long-Rang Vision, 2002, Kerkira
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Technical Commission Close Range Techniques and Machine Vision
Technikon Epimeltrion ts Hellados (Griechische Kammer der Technik)
Publisher of the digital copy:
Technische Informationsbibliothek Hannover
Place of publication of the digital copy:
Hannover
Year of publication of the original:
2019
Document type:
Monograph
Collection:
Earth sciences

Chapter

Title:
WGV/4 Image Analysis and Spatial Information Systems for Applications in Cultural Heritage
Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter

Chapter

Title:
AUTOMATIC REGISTRATION OF 3-D VIEWS R. Bologna, A. Guarnieri, M. Minchilli, A. Vettore
Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter

Contents

Table of contents

  • Close-range imaging, long-range vision
  • Cover
  • ColorChart
  • Title page
  • ISPRS Council 2000 - 2004
  • ISPRS Commission V Symposium: CLOSE-RANGE IMAGING, LONG-RANGE VISION
  • President's Invitation
  • Contents
  • WGV/1: Automation for Vision Metrology Systems and Industrial Applications
  • SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT FOR REMOTE CONTROL OF DIGITAL METRIC CAMERAS VIA LAN AND INTERNET Ingo Bock, Guenter Pomaska
  • IMPROVING THE ROBUSTNESS OF LEAST SQUARES TEMPLATE MATCHING WITH A LINE-SEARCH ALGORITHM Niclas Börlin
  • SEMI AUTOMATIC REGISTRATION OF LASER SCANNER DATA S. T. Dijkman, F. A. van den Heuvel
  • DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF A PHOTOGRAMMETRIC SYSTEM FOR CLOSE RANGE INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS B. Ergün’, M. O. Altan
  • GEOMETRIC INFORMATION FROM SINGLE UNCALIBRATED IMAGES OF ROADS L. Grammatikopoulos, G. E. Karras, E. Petsa
  • IMAGE-VARIANT INTERIOR ORIENTATION AND SENSOR MODELLING OF HIGH-QUALITY DIGITAL CAMERAS H. Hastedt, Th. Luhmann, W. Tecklenburg
  • REAL-TIME PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ALGORITHMS FOR ROBOT CALIBRATION J. Hefele
  • PERFORMANCE OF CIRCULAR IMAGE BLOCKS IN CLOSE-RANGE PHOTOGRAMMETRY Jussi Heikkinen
  • PHOTOGRAMMETRIC PERFORMANCE EVALUATION OF THE KODAK DCS PRO BACK Ralf Jantos, Thomas Luhmann, Jürgen Peipe, Carl-Thomas Schneider
  • METHOD FOR ON-LINE CALIBRATION FOR AUTOMOBILE OBSTACLE DETECTION SYSTEM V. A. Knyaz
  • NEW SYSTEM OF DIGITAL CAMERA CALIBRATION, DC-1000 T. Noma, H. Otani, T. Ito, M. Yamada, N. Kochi
  • ALGORITHM DEVELOPMENTS FOR AUTOMATED OFF-LINE VISION METROLOGY J. O. Otepka, H. B. Hanley, C. S. Fraser
  • ACCURACY OF DENSE SURFACE MEASUREMENTS IN AN INTEGRA TED PHOTOGRAMMETRY AND MACHINE VISION FRAMEWORK H. Papadaki
  • A NEW “DIGITAL FILTER” FOR EXTRACTING CONJUGATE POINTS ON EPIPOLAR STEREO IMAGES P. Patias, V. Tsioukas, L. Sechidis
  • Automated Point Measurement of Dynamic Skin Membrane Surfaces Utilizing a Dot Projection Photogrammetric Technique Gary Robertson
  • ENHANCED MULTI-CLUSTER ANM FOR STEREO MATCHING M. Sakamoto, W. Lu, Y. Kosugi
  • CHARACTERISATION AND TRACKING OF MEMBRANE SURFACES AT NASA LANGLEY RESEARCH CENTER Mark R. Shortis, Stuart Robson, Richard S. Pappa, Thomas W. Jones and William K. Goad
  • STUDY ON VISUAL TRAVERSE BY LASER SCANNING SENSOR R. Tanaka, H. Yokoyama, H. Chikatsu
  • AUTOMATIC HIERARCHICAL OBJECT DECOMPOSITION FOR OBJECT RECOGNITION M. Ulrich, A. Baumgartner, C. Steger
  • COMPARISION OF DIFFERENT SENSOR TYPES AND VALIDATION OF AN APPROACH FOR MULTI SENSOR FUSION A. Wendt, C. Rosing, M. Weisensee
  • USE OF DLT IN PHOTOGRAMMETRIC METROLOGY Zeroual I. Liazid A.
  • RECONSTRUCTING TEXTURED CAD MODEL OF URBAN ENVIRONMENT USING VEHICLE-BORNE LASER RANGE SCANNER AND LINE CAMERAS Huijing Zhao, Ryosuke Shibasaki
  • CAR COLLISION AVOIDANCE SYSTEM BASED ON ORTHOPHOTO TRANSFORMATION S. Yu. Zheltov, A. V. Sybiryakov, O. V. Vygolov
  • WGV/2 Scene Modelling and Virtual Reality
  • SINGLE IMAGE AND TOPOLOGY APPROACHES FOR MODELING BUILDINGS O. Al Khalil & P. Grussenmeyer
  • TOWARDS AUTOMATED SEGMENTATION OF DENSE RANGE SCANS Jan Böhm
  • SEMI-AUTOMATIC 3D RECONSTRUCTION OF OCCLUDED AND UNMARKED SURFACES FROM WIDELY SEPARATED VIEWS Sabry F. El-Hakim
  • Dynamic trapezoidal maps for coarse perspective models in indoor scenes Javier Finat, Margarita Gonzalo-Tasis, Maria J. Antolinez Susana Aguilar
  • Title: A fast self-organized iconic segmentation and grouping based in color Javier Finat, Margarita Gonzalo-Tasis and Alejandro Viloria.
  • LASER SCANNER APPLICATION ON COMPLEX SHAPES OF ARCHITECTURE. PROFILES EXTRACTION PROCESSING AND 3D MODELLING. Luigi FREGONESE [...] Cristiana ACHILLE [...]
  • FAST RECOVERY OF IMAGE ORIENTATION USING VIRTUAL URBAN MODELS Charalampos Georgiadis, Anthony Stefanidis, Peggy Agouris
  • SCENE MODELING BY USING VIDEO CAMERA Tsukasa Hosmura, Tetsuo Ohta
  • PHOTOREALISTIC OBJECT RECONSTRUCTION USING COLOR IMAGE MATCHING Yasemin Kuzu
  • FLEXIBLE 3-D MODELLING OF HOSTILE ENVIRONMENTS WITH CONSTRAINED VIEWPOINT AND MULTIPLE UNKNOWNS Christophe Leroux, Philippe Even, Anne Lottin, Rodolphe Gelin, Jean Marc Idasiak, Jean François Boissonneau, Michel Jeanjacques
  • Bundle Orientation and 3-D Object Reconstruction from Multiple-Station Panoramic Imagery Thomas Luhmann, Werner Tecklenburg
  • A NEW METHOD TO CREATE A GEOMETRICALLY CORRECTED IMAGE OF A DIGITAL CAMERA Ryuji Matsuoka, Kiyonari Fukue, Kohei Cho, Haruhisa Shimoda, Yoshiaki Matsumae, Kenji Hongo, Naoki Shirai
  • VIEW SYNTHESIS WITH THE TRIFOCAL TENSOR FROM UNCALIBRATED IMAGERY Helmut Mayer, Wolfram Büchner, Thomas Riegel
  • MOBILE MAPPING FROM STEREO OMNI-DIRECTIONAL VISION S. Ozawa, I. Miyagawa, K. Wakabayashi, T. Arikawa
  • A GENERIC 3D MODEL FOR AUTOMATED BUILDING ROOF RECONSTRUCTION S. Scholze, T. Moons, L. Van Gool
  • CALIBRATION OF AN SEM, USING A NANO POSITIONING TILTING TABLE AND A MICROSCOPIC CALIBRATION PYRAMID Olaf Sinram, Martin Ritter, S. Kleindiek, A. Schertel, H. Hohenberg and J. Albertz
  • 3D OBJECT RECONSTRUCTION IN CLOSE RANGE PHOTOGRAMMETRIC PROBLEMS E. Stylianidis, P. Patias
  • EXTRACTION OF BUILDING FOOTPRINTS FROM AIRBORNE LASER SCANNER DATA AND ORTHO IMAGE Hiroshi TAKEDA Naoko KURISAKI Wentao CHE
  • TOWARDS AUTOMATIC RELATIVE ORIENTATION FOR ARCHITECTURAL PHOTOGRAMMETRY Frank A. van den Heuvel
  • KNOWLEDGE-BASED AUTOMATIC 3D LINE EXTRACTION FROM CLOSE RANGE IMAGES S. Zlatanova and F. A. van den Heuvel
  • WGV/3 Medical Image Analysis and Human Motion
  • MEASUREMENT AND MODELING OF HUMAN FACES FROM MULTI IMAGES Nicola D'Apuzzo
  • REPRESENTING THE HUMAN VASCULAR SYSTEM WITH THE USE OF X-RAY PICTURES Á. Detrekói, K. Fekete, Z. Tóth, O. Alhusain, A. Juhász, I. Stuber, Á. Rakusz
  • 3D Brain Volume and Surface Visualization with CT and MR Images for Diagnosing Abnormal Structures: Integration with Photogrammetric Techniques (EXTENDED SUMMARY) S. Dogan, M. O. Altan
  • MARKERLESS FULL BODY SHAPE AND MOTION CAPTURE FROM VIDEO SEQUENCES P. Fua, A. Gruen, N. D'Apuzzo, R. Plänkers
  • SONOGRAPHIC TECHNICAL ASPECTS AND IMAGING FEATURES IN THE EVALUATION OF ACUTE SCROTAL PATHOLOGY IN CHILDREN Katsimba D., Tzouveleki M., Miliou Th., Christopoulos S.
  • A ROBUST PHOTOGRAMMETRIC SYSTEM FOR WOUND MEASUREMENT A. Malian, F. A. van den Heuvel, A. Azizi
  • ON THE APPLICATION FOR ROAD STRUCTURE IN DYNAMIC ANALYSIS OF HUMAN MOTION USING HVT SYSTEM T. Odake, H. Chikatsu
  • A CONCEPT WORK FOR AUGMENTED REALITY VISUALISATION BASED ON A MEDICAL APPLICATION IN LIVER SURGERY Tim Suthau, Marcus Vetter, Peter Hassenpflug, Hans-Peter Meinzer, Olaf Hellwich
  • ANALYSIS OF TIME-SPACE EFFECT OF WALKING USING ACCELEROMETERS AND GYRO SENSOR SYSTEM Masako Tsuruoka, Yuriko Tsuruoka, Ryosuke Shibasaki, Yoshifumi Yasuoka, Shunji Murai
  • WGV/4 Image Analysis and Spatial Information Systems for Applications in Cultural Heritage
  • NEW FRONTIERS TO ARCHITECTURAL SURVEY: LASER SCANNER 3D Prof. L. Andreozzi, L. Barnobi, A. Giuffrida, C. Santagati
  • DIGITAL ORTOPHOTO OF SAN MARCO’S BASILICA IN VENICE G. Auditore, D. Miniutti, L. Pilot
  • THE PROMOTION OF CULTURAL HERITAGE THROUGH INTERNET USING ADVANCED AUDIO-VISUAL INFORMATION: THE VENETIAN CASTLES OF PELOPONNISOS E. Bakourou, V. Tsioukas, I. Katzougraki, E. Stylianidis, K. Papadimitriou, P. Patias
  • LASER APPLICATIONS FOR 3D SURVEY OF CULTURAL HERITAGE C. Balletti, F. Guerra
  • GIS DESIGN USING HIGH GEOMETRIC RESOLUTION SATELLITE IMAGES AND HYPERSPECTRAL AIRBORNE DATA P. Boccardo, F. Giulio Tomolo, A. Spanò
  • AUTOMATIC REGISTRATION OF 3-D VIEWS R. Bologna, A. Guarnieri, M. Minchilli, A. Vettore
  • HIGH RESOLUTION DIGITAL IMAGE ORIENTATION USING LASER SCANNER DATA Leandro Bornaz, Andrea Lingua, Fulvio Rinaudo
  • WEB ARCHAEOLOGICAL DATA MANAGEMENT SYSTEM FROM UNDERWATER PHOTOGRAMMETRY. AN APPLICATION ON TWO ROMAN WRECKS Marco Canciani, Pamela Gambogi, Pierre Drap
  • SURVEYING METHODS OF ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE FOR A GIS IMPLEMENTATION M. Caprioli, R. Bologna, A. Scognamiglio
  • PERFORMANCE EVALUATION OF RECENT HIGH RESOLUTION AMATEUR CAMERAS AND APPLICATION TO MODELING OF HISTORICAL STRUCTURE Hirofumi Chikatsu, Yoichi Kunii
  • UNDERWATER PHOTOGRAMMETRY AND XML BASED DOCUMENTATION SYSTEM: The case of the 'Grand Ribaud F' Etruscan wreck Pierre Drap, Emmanuel Bruno, Luc Long, Anne Durand, Pierre Grussenmeyer
  • ‘ARPENTEUR’ AS WEB BASED PHOTOGRAMMETRIC PACKAGE: TOWARDS INTEROPERABILITY THROUGH A XML STRUCTURE FOR PHOTOGRAMMETRIC DATA Pierre Drap, Pierre Grussenmeyer, Gilles Gaillard
  • USING 3D GIS FOR DOCUMENTATION OF HISTORICAL MONUMENT Zaide DURAN & Gönül TOZ
  • NON-METRIC BIRD'S EYE VIEW Prof. A. Georgopoulos, M. Modatsos
  • RECONSTRUCTION OF THE GREAT BUDDHA OF BAMIYAN, AFGHANISTAN A. Gruen, F. Remondino, L. Zhang
  • URBAN CONSERVATION STUDY BASED ON COMPUTER AIDED DESIGN TECHNIQUES:A CASE OF ZEYREK/ISTANBUL N. Zeren Gülersoy, T. K. Koramaz
  • DIGITAL PHOTOGRAMMETRY FOR THE ON SITE DOCUMENTATION OF THE OASIS OF SIRWAH IN THE REPUBLIC OF YEMEN J. Heckes, A. Hornschuch, U. Kapp, N. Röring
  • COMBINATION OF PHOTOGRAMMETRY AND EASY-TO-USE NON-METRIC METHODS FOR THE DOCUMENTATION OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXCAVATIONS Guido HEINZ
  • RECONSTRUCTION OF ANCIENT OLYMPIA IN 3D COMPUTER GRAPHICS A Landscape Analysis of Classical Site Juko ITO, Kohei IWABUCHI
  • THE DIGITAL DATABASE IN ARCHAEOLOGY Paul F. Jacobs
  • DOCUMENTATION AND VISUALIZATION OF HISTORICAL CITY CENTERS: A MULTI-SENSOR APPROACH FOR A NEW TECHNOLOGICAL PARADIGM P. Patias, G. Karapostolou, P. Simeonidis
  • GEOMETRIC CALIBRATION OF A VISIBLE-NIR VIDEO CAMERA J. L. Lerma, L. A. Ruiz, F. Buchón, R. Pons, M. Galindez
  • Application of Computer Technic in the Reconstruct of Chinese Ancient Buildings Deren Li, Yixuan Zhu, Jie Yang, Fuling Bian
  • VIRTUALISATION OF AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE E. S. Malinverni, G. Gagliardini, G. Fangi
  • THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL ASPECTS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL ORTHOIMAGING D. Mavromati, E. Petsa, G. E. Karras
  • New Perspectives for Environmental Archaeological GIS Yoshito MIYATSUKA
  • 3D MODELS GENERATION FROM LASER SCANNER DATA TO SUPPORT DIGITAL ORTHOPHOTO 3D: The mosaic surface of the floor of S. Marcus Basilica in Venice. Carlo MONTI [...] Raffaella BRUMANA [...] Luigi FREGONESE [...] Carlo SAVI [...] Christiana ACHILLE [...]
  • Experimentation of a georeferencing methodology for the Cultural Heritage of Lombardia (Italy) Carlo MONTI [...] Raffaella BRUMANA [...] Carlo SAVI [...] Luigi FREGONESE [...] Christiana ACHILLE [...] Giada MONTI [...] Caterina BALLETTI [...] Giovanni AUDITORE [...]
  • DIGITAL INFORMATION UTILIZATION ON PRESERVATION MANAGEMENT OF CULTURAL PROPERTIES Syozo NISHIMURA, Sunaryo SUMITRO
  • IMAGE COMBINATION INTO LARGE VIRTUAL IMAGES FOR FAST 3D MODELLING OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES Maria Pateraki, Emmanuel Baltsavias, Petros Patias
  • SATELLITES IMAGES OF VERY HIGH RESOLUTION ON THE STUDY OF MONUMENTS AND HISTORICAL CENTERS AND THEIR WIDE SURROUNDINGS Patmios E, Lazaridou M.
  • RECONSTRUCTION OF THE ROMAN WAREHOUSES IN ANCONA HARBOUR Fausto Pugnaloni and Roberto Papa
  • A SOLUTION FOR IMAGE ORIENTATION OF CLOSE RANGE BLOCKS M. Scaioni, G. Forlani
  • MAPPING EXCAVATIONS AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES USING CLOSE RANGE PHOTOS K. Tokmakidis, D. Scarlatos
  • FITTING, PORTAYAL AND MAPPING FOR THE PRODUCTION OF 2nd ORDER SURFACES PHOTOMOSAICS Artemis Valanis
  • DOCUMENTATION of HISTORICAL SITES by COMBINING MODERN PHOTOGRAMMETRIC and LASER TECHNOLOGY E. Vozikis, C. Boletis, J. Petrogonas
  • POTENTIAL OF GIS FOR ENVIRONMENTAL ARCHAEOLOGY: A CASE STUDY IN AICHI, JAPAN- Nobuya Watanabe, [...] Hiroyuki Yoshida, [...]
  • CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS ON THE GENERATION OF DIGITAL SURFACE MODELS OF FACADES USING IMAGE PROCESSING TECHNIQUES Albert Wiedemann
  • REFIND ORTHO IMAGING AND MODELLING OF RELICS USING HIGH RESOLUTION AMATEUR CAMERA Hiroshi YOKOYAMA, Hirofumi CHIKATSU
  • WGV/5 Quick Response and Distributed Computing for Close-Range Applications
  • AUTOMATED APPEARANCE-BASED BUILDING DETECTION IN TERRESTRIAL IMAGES Jan Böhm, Norbert Haala, Peter Kapusy
  • INVARIANT REPRESENTATIONS FOR PUNCTUAL AND LOCAL GROUPING CRITERIA IN GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS Isidro de Paz, Javier Finat and Margarita Gonzalo-Tasis
  • AUTOMATIC CITY MODELLING BY ROBUST LINE MATCHING USING HIGH VISION AIR-BORNE IMAGERY Y. Kunii, H. Chikatsu
  • A NEW ALGORITHM FOR IMAGE RETRIEVAL FROM IMAGE SEQUENCE Hongchao Ma, Deren Li
  • WET LAND AND SALT CRUST FORMATION BASED ON LANDSAT TM DATA Alavi Panah, S.K.
  • SUMMARIZING THE CONTENT OF MOTION IMAGERY DATASETS Anthony Stefanidis, Peggy Agouris, Panos Partsinevelos
  • OPTIMIZING POINT NETWORKS FOR CLOSE-RANGE PHOTOGRAMMETRY: FIRST TEST RESULTS E. Tung, J. Friedrich, F. Karsli, E. Ayhan
  • WGV/6 Visualization and Animation
  • THE WELL PROMISING FLASHPIX IMAGE FORMAT O. Georgoula, P. Patias
  • THE MEDIEVAL FORTRESS KUFSTEIN, AUSTRIA - AN EXAMPLE FOR THE RESTITUTION AND VISUALIZATION OF CULTURAL HERITAGE Klaus Hanke, Michael Oberschneider
  • ANALYSIS OF DIFFERENT CALIBRATION MODELS FOR SEE-THROUGH HEAD-MOUNTED DISPLAYS USED FOR AUGMENTED REALITY APPLICATIONS Johannes Leebmann
  • COMPUTER AIDED MAKING UP FOR HUMAN FACE USING GEO-SIMULATOR Shunji MURAI, Akira TSUTUMI, Masanobu KOBAYASHI, Yousuke SEKI
  • ON DEVELOPMENT OF MANAGEMENT AND PLAN SYSTEM FOR MAP PRODUCTION Kazuya NAKANO, Kosuke TSURU
  • LASER SCANNING AND VISUALISATION OF AN AUSTRALIAN ICON: NED KELLY'S ARMOUR Cliff Ogleby
  • 3D-VISUALIZATION TECHNIQUES - THE COMPLETE LIST - W. Schuhr, E. Kanngieser
  • A NEW PERSPECTIVE FOR THE VISUALIZATION OF CARTOGRAPHIC DATA V. Tsioukas, K. Papadopoulos, M. Daniil, E. Daniil
  • ICWG V/III Image Sequence Analysis
  • DEVELOPMENT OF TECHNIQUES FOR VEHICLE MANOEUVRES RECOGNITION WITH SEQUENTIAL IMAGES FROM HIGH ALTITUDE PLATFORMS T. Fuse, E. Shimizu, R. Maeda
  • CONSTRUCTION OF CITY MODEL BY MOTION Yousuke Kashimoto, Heitoh Zen
  • METHOD OF THE CURRENT PITCH ANGLE VALUE CALCULATION ON THE BASIS OF PASSIVE SENSORS DATA PROCESSING IN INTELLIGENT DRIVING SYSTEMS V. M. Lisitsyn, K. V. Obrosov, A. A. Spiridonov, S. V. Tikhonova
  • VIDEO-TO-3D Marc Pollefeys, Luc Van Gool, Maarten Vergauwen, Kurt Cornelis, Frank Verbiest, Jan Tops
  • CAMERA CALIBRATION BY ROTATION Petteri Pöntinen
  • IMAGE SEQUENCE ANALYSIS FOR HUMAN BODY RECONSTRUCTION Fabio Remondino
  • IMAGE SEQUENCE MATCHING FOR THE DETERMINATION OF THREE-DIMENSIONAL WAVE SURFACES F. Santel, C. Heipke, S. Könnecke, H. Wegmann
  • 3D PARTICLE TRACKING VELOCIMETRY BASED ON IMAGE AND OBJECT SPACE INFORMATION J. Willneff
  • URBAN 3D MAPPING FROM AERIAL IMAGE SEQUENCES Guoqing Zhou
  • Keywords Index
  • Authors Index
  • Cover

Full text

Jigital 
di Milano, 
). 
one 
pt GIS for 
tional 
  
AUTOMATIC REGISTRATION OF 3-D VIEWS 
R. Bologna“, A. Guarnieri°, M. Minchilli", A. Vettore“ 
“ Dept. of Architecture and Town-Planning — Polytechnic of Bari (Italy) 
? Dept. of Architecture and Planning — University of Sassari (Italy) 
* CIRGEO (Interdept. Research Center of Cartography, Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and GIS) 
University of Padua — 35020 Legnaro (PD) — AGRIPOLIS - Italy 
e-mail: cirgeo@unipd.it ; antonio.vettore@unipd.it 
Commission V, WG V/4 
KEY WORDS: 3D models, automatic registration, range data 
ABSTRACT 
Building of 3D models for single objects so as for whole environments, represents a continuosly and quickly evolving new research 
field of the computer science. The arising interest in this field is strictly related with the increasing availability of more powerful 
CPUs, overall in terms of PCs, which made possible, for the first time, to effectively manage complex 3D models off the research 
centers, as well. A new set of issues has to be addressed in the 3D modeling of real objects. A lot of data are needed about the object 
surface or volume, which have then to be aggregated, regardless the data format and the acquisition device used, in order to get the 
final model. Actually, the data registration step requires a human operator, which were able to provide a first rough alignement 
between acquired data. This approach is often time-consuming, increases the final cost of the 3D model and represents the major 
limit to the wide spreading of real object models. Alternatively more sofisticated range data acquisition devices can be used, such a 
range sensor mounted on a robotic arm with six degree of freedom, but anyway it is a very expensive modeling system. 
In the light of topics previously exposed, a fully automatic range data registration system has been developed. This system is able to 
execute all the steps needed for 3D modeling of real objects in automatic way or at least minimizing as more as possible the human 
intervention, without any other information but the range data only. 
In this paper, the subsystem for alignement of range data pairs is presented. The work draws the idea from A. E. Johnson[1], which 
proposed an innovative solution for the recognition of similarities between 3D surfaces, introducing the spin-image concept. The 
advantage of this approach rely on high computational robustness and effectiveness, which allows to employ standard market-level 
CPUs. On the ground of the spin-image concept, a full data registration system was developed, in which the overlapping areas of two 
adjacent data set are automatically recognized, thus allowing to correctly align the two whole data sets. 
1. INTRODUCTION 
Building of 3D models for single objects so as for whole 
environments, represents a continuosly and quickly evolving 
new research field of the computer science. The arising interest 
in this field is strictly related with the increasing availability of 
more powerful CPUs, overall in terms of PCs, which made 
possible, for the first time, to effectively manage complex 3D 
models off the research centers, as well. In the wide area of 3D 
models we can distinguish two main categories: CAD or real 
object models. 
The models belonging to the first class are realized with a 
workstation and are fully under the responsability of the 
designer. These models can be created in a CAD environment to 
build real objects, such for instance mechanical pieces, and 
often they are then translated in the VRML format in order to be 
distributed on the web. Sometimes an inverse approach is 
needed: building a 3D model from a real object. Motivations at 
the ground of this choice are different, i.e. such a models can be 
used for reverse engineering or also in the medical field, to get 
more qualitative and quantitative information than common 2D 
images could offer. In this last case it should be considered the 
3D modeling of anatomical parts such theeth or bones. Another 
application of the second class of 3D models deals with the 
need of filling an virtual environment with real objects, in order 
to get a faithful copy of a real environment, such as the inside of 
a museum or historical building. 
Furthermore, 3D models of both abovementio-ned classes 
represent an interesting tool for documentation and interactive 
visualization purposes. For example they allow to represent 3D 
objects more adequately than through single picture or 
collection of pictures, and to change easily the user point of 
view, providing in this way a useful tool by which the human 
direct inspection can be well simulated. 
A new set of issues has to be addressed in the 3D modeling of 
real objects. A lot of data are needed about the object surface or 
volume, which have then to be aggregated, regardless the data 
format and the acquisition device used, in order to get the final 
model. Actually, 3D modeling of real free-form surfaces consist 
of the following steps: 
1. Pairwise alignment of the 3D images; 
2. Global alignment; 
3. Fusion of the 3D data originally captured as clouds of points 
into 3D surfaces; 
4. Editing of possible surface holes due to minor missing data. 
Step 2) and 3) are already performed automatically, while step 
1) at the present requires a human operator, which were able to 
provide a first rough alignement between acquired data. This 
approach is often time-consuming, increases the final cost of the 
3D model and represents the major limit to the wide spreading 
of real object models. 
Step 4), nowadays performed manually, may not be necessary if 
an adequate amount of data is captured (which however may not 
always be feasible). 
—315— 
 
	        

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