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UBC Theses and Dissertations
Surface reflectance and shape from images using a collinear light source Lu, Jiping
Abstract
The purpose of computer vision is to extract useful information from images. Image features such as occluding contours, edges, flow, brightness, and shading provide geometric and photometric constraints on the surface shape and reflectance of physical objects in the scene. In this thesis, two novel techniques are proposed for surface reflectance extraction and surface recovery. They integrate geometric and photometric constraints in images of a rotating object illuminated under a collinear light source (where the illu- minant direction of the light source lies on or near the viewing direction of the camera). The rotation of the object can be precisely controlled. The object surface is assumed to be C2 and its surface reflectance function is uniform. The first technique, called the photogeometric technique, uses geometric and photometric constraints on surface points with surface normal perpendicular to the image plane to calculate 3D locations of surface points, then extracts the surface reflectance function by tracking these surface points in the images. Using the extracted surface reflectance function and two images of the surface, the technique recovers the depth and surface orientation of the surface simultaneously. The second technique, named the wire-frame technique, further exploits geometric and photometric constraints on the surface points with surface orientation coplanar with the viewing direction and the rotation axis to extract a set of 3D curves. The set of 3D curves comprises a wire frame on the surface. The depth and surface orientation between curves on the wire frame can be interpolation by using geometric or photometric methods. The surface reflectance function can be extracted from the points on the wire frame and used for photometric interpolation. The wire-frame technique is superior because it does not need the surface reflectance function to extract the wire frame. It also works on piecewise uniform surfaces and requires only that the light source be coplanar with the viewing direction and the rotation axis. In addition, by interpolating the depth and surface orientation from a dense wire frame, the surface recovered is more accurate. The two techniques have been tested on real images of surfaces with different reflectance properties and geometric structures. The experimental results and comprehensive analysis show that the proposed techniques are efficient and robust. As an attempt to extend our research to computer graphics, work on extracting the shading function from real images for graphics rendering shows some promising results.
Item Metadata
Title |
Surface reflectance and shape from images using a collinear light source
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Creator | |
Publisher |
University of British Columbia
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Date Issued |
1997
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Description |
The purpose of computer vision is to extract useful information from images. Image
features such as occluding contours, edges, flow, brightness, and shading provide geometric
and photometric constraints on the surface shape and reflectance of physical objects
in the scene. In this thesis, two novel techniques are proposed for surface reflectance
extraction and surface recovery. They integrate geometric and photometric constraints
in images of a rotating object illuminated under a collinear light source (where the illu-
minant direction of the light source lies on or near the viewing direction of the camera).
The rotation of the object can be precisely controlled. The object surface is assumed to
be C2 and its surface reflectance function is uniform.
The first technique, called the photogeometric technique, uses geometric and photometric
constraints on surface points with surface normal perpendicular to the image plane
to calculate 3D locations of surface points, then extracts the surface reflectance function
by tracking these surface points in the images. Using the extracted surface reflectance
function and two images of the surface, the technique recovers the depth and surface
orientation of the surface simultaneously.
The second technique, named the wire-frame technique, further exploits geometric
and photometric constraints on the surface points with surface orientation coplanar with
the viewing direction and the rotation axis to extract a set of 3D curves. The set of 3D
curves comprises a wire frame on the surface. The depth and surface orientation between
curves on the wire frame can be interpolation by using geometric or photometric methods.
The surface reflectance function can be extracted from the points on the wire frame and
used for photometric interpolation.
The wire-frame technique is superior because it does not need the surface reflectance
function to extract the wire frame. It also works on piecewise uniform surfaces and
requires only that the light source be coplanar with the viewing direction and the rotation
axis. In addition, by interpolating the depth and surface orientation from a dense wire
frame, the surface recovered is more accurate.
The two techniques have been tested on real images of surfaces with different reflectance
properties and geometric structures. The experimental results and comprehensive
analysis show that the proposed techniques are efficient and robust. As an attempt
to extend our research to computer graphics, work on extracting the shading function
from real images for graphics rendering shows some promising results.
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Extent |
22610978 bytes
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Genre | |
Type | |
File Format |
application/pdf
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Language |
eng
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Date Available |
2009-03-31
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Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
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Rights |
For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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DOI |
10.14288/1.0051027
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URI | |
Degree | |
Program | |
Affiliation | |
Degree Grantor |
University of British Columbia
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Graduation Date |
1997-05
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Campus | |
Scholarly Level |
Graduate
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Aggregated Source Repository |
DSpace
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Item Media
Item Citations and Data
Rights
For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.