The field of computer vision is now opening up possibilities offered by analyzing surface data for object recognition and scene understanding. This volume, which highlights current research, demonstrates that surface information can greatly simplify the image understanding process. The study is as m
Computer Analysis of Scenes of 3-Dimensional Curved Objects
β Scribed by Ramakant Nevatia (auth.)
- Publisher
- BirkhΓ€user Basel
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 134
- Series
- Interdisciplinary Systems Research / InterdisziplinΓ€re Systemforschung
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
1.0 2 The attention then turned to the problem of "Body separation", i.e. separation of occluding bodies in a scene (See [Guzman), [Falk), and [Waltz)). Grape ([Grape)) combined the separation of bodies with recognition, by removing parts of the scene recognized as belonging to a known body. All of these techniques were designed to work with polyhedral objects only, and extensively use the properties of edges and vertices. Though some impressive results have been reported ([Waltz], [Grape)), and perhaps some useful abstractions can be made, the specific techniques used fail to generalize to a wider class of objects. Among previous work on curved objects, B.K.P. Horn ([Horn)) presented techniques for extracting three dimensional depth data from a TV image, using reflection characteristics of the surface. Krakauer ([Krakauer]) represented objects by connections of brightness contours. Ambler et al ([Ambler)) describe experiments with simple shapes, including curved objects, using relations within a two-dimensional image. However, none of these efforts really addresses the problem of "shape" representation and description. Work on outdoor scene analysis is also concerned with non-polyhedral objects ([Bajcsy], [Yakimovsky]), but again no attention has been paid to shape analysis.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages N2-v
Introduction....Pages 1-7
Representation....Pages 8-11
Data Acquisition and Boundary Organization....Pages 12-21
Body Segmentation and Primitive Descriptions....Pages 22-43
Symbolic Descriptions....Pages 44-53
Recognition....Pages 54-75
Results and Conclusions....Pages 76-95
Back Matter....Pages 96-125
β¦ Subjects
Science, general
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