Three-Dimensional Scene Reconstruction: A Review of Approaches

Dimitrios Chrysostomou, Antonios Gasteratos

Research output: Contribution to book/anthology/report/conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Abstract

The production of 3D models has been a popular research topic already for a long time, and important progress has been made since the early days. During the last decades, vision systems have established to become the standard and one of the most efficient sensorial assets in industrial and everyday applications. Due to the fact that vision provides several vital attributes, many applications tend to use novel vision systems into domestic, working, industrial and any other environment. To achieve such goals, a vision system should robustly and effectively reconstruct the 3D surface and the working space. This chapter discusses different methods for capturing the three-dimensional surface of a scene. Geometric approaches to three-dimensional scene reconstruction are generally based on the knowledge of the scene structure from the camera internal and external parameters. Another class of methods encompasses the photometric approaches, which evaluate the pixels’ intensity to understand the three-dimensional scene structure. The third and final category of approaches, the so-called real aperture approaches, includes methods that use the physical properties of the visual sensors for image acquisition, in order to reproduce the depth information of a scene.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationDepth Map and 3D Imaging Applications: Algorithms and Technologies
EditorsSaeed Aamir Malik, Tae Sun Choi, Humaira Nisar
Number of pages21
PublisherIGI global
Publication date1 Oct 2011
Pages142 - 162
Chapter8
ISBN (Print) 978-1-61350-326-3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2011
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • 3D reconstruction
  • multi-camera systems
  • Camera calibration
  • Pinhole camera
  • Shape from silhouettes
  • Stereo Vision
  • Shape from shading
  • Shape from texture
  • Shape from focus
  • Shape from defocus

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