DocumentCode :
2584824
Title :
Autonomous perception systems for dynamic virtual environments
Author :
Rabie, Tamer F.
Author_Institution :
Intelligent Transp. Syst. Centre, Toronto Univ., Ont., Canada
fYear :
2002
fDate :
2002
Firstpage :
85
Lastpage :
90
Abstract :
One way of interacting with a virtual environment is through visual perception. This paper presents research work on modeling an artificial vision system for highly mobile autonomous agents that is capable of dynamic obstacle avoidance and active perception. The robust performance of the system is demonstrated in artificial animals with directable, foveated eyes, situated in a physics-based virtual environment. Through simulated active perception, each agent controls its eyes and body by continuously analyzing photorealistic binocular retinal image streams. The vision system estimates optical flow, computes stereo disparity and segments looming targets in the low-resolution visual periphery while controlling eye movements to track, an object fixated in the high-resolution fovea. It matches segmented targets against mental models of colored objects of interest in order to decide whether the segmented objects are harmless or represent dangerous obstacles. The latter are localized, enabling the artificial animal to exercise the sensorimotor control necessary to support complex behaviors, such as predation, and obstacle avoidance.
Keywords :
active vision; artificial life; collision avoidance; eye; image colour analysis; image segmentation; image sequences; mobile robots; stereo image processing; virtual reality; visual perception; artificial animals; artificial vision system; autonomous perception systems; body control; colored objects; complex behaviors; continuous photorealistic binocular retinal image stream analysis; directable foveated eyes; dynamic obstacle avoidance; dynamic virtual environments; eye control; high-resolution fovea; highly mobile autonomous agents; low-resolution visual periphery; mental models; modeling; optical flow; physics-based virtual environment; predation; sensorimotor control; simulated active perception; stereo disparity; target segmentation; visual perception; Animals; Autonomous agents; Computational modeling; Eyes; Image segmentation; Machine vision; Optical computing; Robustness; Virtual environment; Visual perception;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Haptic Virtual Environments and Their Applications, IEEE International Workshop 2002 HAVE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7635-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/HAVE.2002.1106919
Filename :
1106919
Link To Document :
بازگشت