Author_Institution :
Lab. for Comput. Sci., MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
We describe the design considerations underlying a system for fully automated capture of precisely controlled imagery in urban scenes. The system operates for architectural scenes in which, from every camera position, some two vanishing points are visible. It has been used to capture thousands of controlled images in outdoor environments spanning hundreds of meters. The proposed system architecture forms the foundation for a future, fully robotic outdoor mapping capability for urban areas,. analogous to existing, satellite-based robotic mapping systems which acquire images and models of natural terrain. Four key ideas distinguish our approach from other methods. First, our sensor acquires georeferencing metadata with every image, enabling related images to be efficiently identified and registered. Second, the sensor acquires omnidirectional images; we show strong experimental evidence that such images are fundamentally more powerful observations than conventional (narrow-FOV) images. Third, the system uses a probabilistic, projective-error formulation to account for uncertainty. By treating measurement error in an appropriate depth-free framework, and by deferring decisions about camera calibration and scene structure until many noisy observations can be fused, the system achieves superior robustness and accuracy. Fourth, the system´s computational requirements scale linearly in the input size, the area of the acquisition region and the size of the output model. This is in contrast to many previous methods, which either assume constant-size inputs or exhibit quadratic running time (or worse) asymptotically.
Keywords :
cartography; geophysical signal processing; image registration; image sensors; indeterminancy; measurement errors; meta data; remote sensing; sensor fusion; architectural scenes; automated controlled imagery capture; camera calibration; camera position; depth-free framework; fully robotic outdoor mapping capability; georeferencing metadata; image registration; measurement error; noisy observations; omnidirectional images; outdoor environments; probabilistic projective error formulation; scene structure; sensor; uncertainty; urban environments; vanishing points; Automatic control; Cameras; Control systems; Image sensors; Layout; Power system modeling; Robot sensing systems; Robot vision systems; Terrain mapping; Urban areas;