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This is the first book to treat the analysis of 3D dynamic scenes
using a stereovision system. Several approaches are described, for
example two different methods for dealing with long and short
sequences of images of an unknown environment including an
arbitrary number of rigid mobile objects. Results obtained from
stereovision systems are found to be superior to those from
monocular image systems, which are often very sensitive to noise
and therefore of little use in practice. It is shown thatmotion
estimation can be further improved by the explicit modeling of
uncertainty in geometric objects. The techniques developed in this
book have been successfully demonstrated with a large number of
real images in the context of visual navigation of a mobile robot.
he problem of analyzing sequences of images to extract
three-dimensional T motion and structure has been at the heart of
the research in computer vi sion for many years. It is very
important since its success or failure will determine whether or
not vision can be used as a sensory process in reactive systems.
The considerable research interest in this field has been motivated
at least by the following two points: 1. The redundancy of
information contained in time-varying images can over come several
difficulties encountered in interpreting a single image. 2. There
are a lot of important applications including automatic vehicle
driv ing, traffic control, aerial surveillance, medical inspection
and global model construction. However, there are many new problems
which should be solved: how to effi ciently process the abundant
information contained in time-varying images, how to model the
change between images, how to model the uncertainty inherently
associated with the imaging system and how to solve inverse
problems which are generally ill-posed. There are of course many
possibilities for attacking these problems and many more remain to
be explored. We discuss a few of them in this book based on work
carried out during the last five years in the Computer Vision and
Robotics Group at INRIA (Institut National de Recherche en
Informatique et en Automatique)."
A collection of papers on computer vision research in Euro- pe,
with sections on image features, stereo and reconstruc- tion,
optical flow, motion, structure from motion, tracking, stereo and
motion, features and shape, shape description, and recognition and
matching.
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