DocumentCode
847262
Title
An investigation of methods for determining depth from focus
Author
Ens, John ; Lawrence, Peter
Author_Institution
Intense Technologies, Richmond, Ont., Canada
Volume
15
Issue
2
fYear
1993
fDate
2/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
97
Lastpage
108
Abstract
The concept of depth from focus involves calculating distances to points in an observed scene by modeling the effect that the camera´s focal parameters have on images acquired with a small depth of field. This technique is passive and requires only a single camera. The most difficult segment of calculating depth from focus is deconvolving the defocus operator from the scene and modeling it. Most current methods for determining the defocus operator employ inverse filtering. The authors reveal some fundamental problems with inverse filtering: inaccuracies in finding the frequency domain representation, windowing effects, and border effects. A general, matrix-based method using regularization is presented, which eliminates these problems. The new method is confirmed experimentally, with the results showing an RMS error of 1.3%
Keywords
computer vision; image recognition; RMS error; border effects; deconvolving; defocus operator; depth from focus; focal parameters; frequency domain representation; inverse filtering; matrix-based method; windowing effects; Cameras; Councils; Filtering; Focusing; Frequency domain analysis; Geometrical optics; Image segmentation; Layout; Lighting; Optical sensors;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0162-8828
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/34.192482
Filename
192482
Link To Document