DocumentCode
64787
Title
Real-Time Scalable Depth Sensing With Hybrid Structured Light Illumination
Author
Yueyi Zhang ; Zhiwei Xiong ; Zhe Yang ; Feng Wu
Author_Institution
Univ. of Sci. & Technol. of China, Hefei, China
Volume
23
Issue
1
fYear
2014
fDate
Jan. 2014
Firstpage
97
Lastpage
109
Abstract
Time multiplexing (TM) and spatial neighborhood (SN) are two mainstream structured light techniques widely used for depth sensing. The former is well known for its high accuracy and the latter for its low delay. In this paper, we explore a new paradigm of scalable depth sensing to integrate the advantages of both the TM and SN methods. Our contribution is twofold. First, we design a set of hybrid structured light patterns composed of phase-shifted fringe and pseudo-random speckle. Under the illumination of the hybrid patterns, depth can be decently reconstructed either from a few consecutive frames with the TM principle for static scenes or from a single frame with the SN principle for dynamic scenes. Second, we propose a scene-adaptive depth sensing framework based on which a global or region-wise optimal depth map can be generated through motion detection. To validate the proposed scalable paradigm, we develop a real-time (20 fps) depth sensing system. Experimental results demonstrate that our method achieves an efficient balance between accuracy and speed during depth sensing that has rarely been exploited before.
Keywords
computational geometry; image reconstruction; lighting; motion estimation; real-time systems; speckle; SN method; SN principle; TM method; dynamic scenes; global-wise optimal depth map; hybrid patterns; hybrid structured light illumination; hybrid structured light patterns; mainstream structured light techniques; motion detection; phase-shifted fringe speckle; pseudo-random speckle; real-time depth sensing system; real-time scalable depth sensing; region-wise optimal depth map; scene-adaptive depth sensing framework; spatial neighborhood; static scenes; time multiplexing; Accuracy; Cameras; Image reconstruction; Lighting; Sensors; Speckle; Tin; Depth sensing; Kinect; fringe; phase-shifting; speckle; structured light;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Image Processing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1057-7149
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TIP.2013.2286901
Filename
6645443
Link To Document