Image-Consistent Surface Triangulation - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Image-Consistent Surface Triangulation

Conference Paper, Proceedings of (CVPR) Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, Vol. 1, pp. 332 - 338, June, 2000

Abstract

Given a set of 3D points that we know lie on the surface of an object, we can define many possible surfaces that pass through all of these points. Even when we consider only surface triangulations, there are still an exponential number of valid triangulations that all fit the data. Each triangulation will produce a different faceted surface connecting the points. Our goal is to overcome this ambiguity and find the particular surface that is closest to the true object surface. We do not know the true surface but instead we assume that we have a set of images of the object. We propose selecting a triangulation based on its consistency with this set of images of the object. We present an algorithm that starts with an initial rough triangulation and refines the triangulation until it obtains a surface that best accounts for the images of the object. Our method is thus able to overcome the surface ambiguity problem and at the same time capture sharp corners and handle concave regions and occlusions. We show results for a few real objects.

BibTeX

@conference{Morris-2000-8048,
author = {Daniel D. Morris and Takeo Kanade},
title = {Image-Consistent Surface Triangulation},
booktitle = {Proceedings of (CVPR) Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition},
year = {2000},
month = {June},
volume = {1},
pages = {332 - 338},
}