• DocumentCode
    2290312
  • Title

    Absolute scale in structure from motion from a single vehicle mounted camera by exploiting nonholonomic constraints

  • Author

    Scaramuzza, Davide ; Fraundorfer, Friedrich ; Pollefeys, Marc ; Siegwart, Roland

  • Author_Institution
    Autonomous Syst. Lab., ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
  • fYear
    2009
  • fDate
    Sept. 29 2009-Oct. 2 2009
  • Firstpage
    1413
  • Lastpage
    1419
  • Abstract
    In structure-from-motion with a single camera it is well known that the scene can be only recovered up to a scale. In order to compute the absolute scale, one needs to know the baseline of the camera motion or the dimension of at least one element in the scene. In this paper, we show that there exists a class of structure-from-motion problems where it is possible to compute the absolute scale completely automatically without using this knowledge, that is, when the camera is mounted on wheeled vehicles (e.g. cars, bikes, or mobile robots). The construction of these vehicles puts interesting constraints on the camera motion, which are known as “nonholonomic constraints”. The interesting case is when the camera has an offset to the vehicle´s center of motion. We show that by just knowing this offset, the absolute scale can be computed with a good accuracy when the vehicle turns. We give a mathematical derivation and provide experimental results on both simulated and real data over a large image dataset collected during a 3 Km path. To our knowledge this is the first time nonholonomic constraints of wheeled vehicles are used to estimate the absolute scale. We believe that the proposed method can be useful in those research areas involving visual odometry and mapping with vehicle mounted cameras.
  • Keywords
    cameras; distance measurement; image processing; absolute scale; camera motion; mathematical derivation; nonholonomic constraints; structure-from-motion problem; vehicle mounted cameras; visual mapping; visual odometry; wheeled vehicles; Axles; Bicycles; Cameras; Computational geometry; Computer vision; Layout; Mobile robots; Motion estimation; Remotely operated vehicles; Robot vision systems;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Computer Vision, 2009 IEEE 12th International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Kyoto
  • ISSN
    1550-5499
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-4420-5
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1550-5499
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICCV.2009.5459294
  • Filename
    5459294