ISSN:
1573-1405
Keywords:
object recognition
;
occlusion
;
affine
;
perspective
;
regions
;
pose estimation
;
uniqueness
;
two-dimensional
;
three-dimensional
;
model
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Computer Science
Notes:
Abstract Recognition systems attempt to recover information about the identity of observed objects and their location in the environment. A fundamental problem in recognition is pose estimation. This is the problem of using a correspondence between some portions of an object model and some portions of an image to determine whether the image contains an instance of the object, and, in case it does, to determine the transformation that relates the model to the image. The current approaches to this problem are divided into methods that use “global” properties of the object (e.g., centroid and moments of inertia) and methods that use “local” properties of the object (e.g., corners and line segments). Global properties are sensitive to occlusion and, specifically, to self occlusion. Local properties are difficult to locate reliably, and their matching involves intensive computation. We present a novel method for recognition that uses region information. In our approach the model and the image are divided into regions. Given a match between subsets of regions (without any explicit correspondence between different pieces of the regions) the alignment transformation is computed. The method applies to planar objects under similarity, affine, and projective transformations and to projections of 3-D objects undergoing affine and projective transformations. The new approach combines many of the advantages of the previous two approaches, while avoiding some of their pitfalls. Like the global methods, our approach makes use of region information that reflects the true shape of the object. But like local methods, our approach can handle occlusion.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1007919917506
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