DocumentCode :
137600
Title :
Automatic calibration of RGBD and thermal cameras
Author :
Lussier, Jake T. ; Thrun, Sebastian
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
fYear :
2014
fDate :
14-18 Sept. 2014
Firstpage :
451
Lastpage :
458
Abstract :
Reasoning about a scene´s thermal signature, in addition to its visual appearance and spatial configuration, would facilitate significant advances in perceptual systems. Applications involving the segmentation and tracking of persons, vehicles, and other heat-emitting objects, for example, could benefit tremendously from even coarsely accurate relative temperatures. With the increasing affordability of commercially available thermal cameras, as well as the imminent introduction of new, mobile form factors, such data will be readily and widely accessible. However, in order for thermal processing to complement existing methods in RGBD, there must be an effective procedure for calibrating RGBD and thermal cameras to create RGBDT (red, green, blue, depth, and thermal) data. In this paper, we present an automatic method for the synchronization and calibration of RGBD and thermal cameras in arbitrary environments. While traditional calibration methods fail in our multimodal setting, we leverage invariant features visible by both camera types. We first synchronize the streams with a simple optimization procedure that aligns their motion statistic time series. We then find the relative poses of the cameras by minimizing an objective that measures the alignment between edge maps from the two streams. In contrast to existing methods that use special calibration targets with key points visible to both cameras, our method requires nothing more than some edges visible to both cameras, such as those arising from humans. We evaluate our method and demonstrate that it consistently converges to the correct transform and that it results in high-quality RGBDT data.
Keywords :
calibration; cameras; feature extraction; image colour analysis; image motion analysis; infrared imaging; optimisation; pose estimation; synchronisation; time series; RGBD camera; RGBDT; alignment measures; automatic calibration method; edge maps; invariant feature extraction; mobile form factors; motion statistic time series; optimization procedure; perceptual systems; pose estimation; scene thermal signature; spatial configuration; streams synchronization; thermal camera; thermal processing; visual appearance; Calibration; Cameras; Image edge detection; Synchronization; Thermal sensors; Transforms;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS 2014), 2014 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IROS.2014.6942598
Filename :
6942598
Link To Document :
بازگشت