DocumentCode :
281451
Title :
Towards 3D vision for mobile and grasping robots
Author :
Stephens, M.J.
Author_Institution :
Plessey Res., Romsey, UK
fYear :
1989
fDate :
32532
Firstpage :
42461
Lastpage :
42465
Abstract :
To adapt to its environment, a robot must be equipped with senses and processing which provide a usable representation of the environment. The real world is three dimensional and a system using 2D vision alone will have difficulties with, say, reliable obstacle avoidance. Ideally, 3D vision processing is required, and most of the processing must be scene-driven (bottom-up), in order to offer useful information in unexpected conditions. Stereopsis and structure-from-motion both offer direct 3D visual information (essentially from triangulation), once a correspondence of several images has been achieved. Stereo offers the advantages of short to medium range accuracy, and 3D information without sensor motion. Structure-from-motion, integrating 3D information coherently from multiple viewpoints, offers useful 3D information at long ranges (with large enough motion baseline), and the filling-in of detail obscured or not properly detected in a single view. More importantly, the coherency principle for motion allows for dynamic vision, which provides (with fast enough processing) a continually evolving representation for a moving robot. The paper concentrates on monocular vision from a moving camera
Keywords :
computer vision; mobile robots; 3D vision; bottom-up processing; coherent information integration; computer vision; dynamic vision; grasping robots; mobile robots; monocular vision; moving camera; multiple viewpoints; obstacle avoidance; scene-driven processing; structure-from-motion; triangulation; unexpected conditions;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
iet
Conference_Titel :
Computer Vision for Robotics, IEE Colloquium on
Conference_Location :
London
Type :
conf
Filename :
197756
Link To Document :
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