Micro Phase Shifting
Gupta
Mohit
author
Columbia University. Computer Science
Nayar
Shree K.
author
Columbia University. Computer Science
Columbia University. Computer Science
originator
text
Articles
2012
manuscript version
English
We consider the problem of shape recovery for real world scenes, where a variety of global illumination (inter-reflections, subsurface scattering, etc.) and illumination defocus effects are present. These effects introduce systematic and often significant errors in the recovered shape. We introduce a structured light technique called Micro Phase Shifting, which overcomes these problems. The key idea is to project sinusoidal patterns with frequencies limited to a narrow, high-frequency band. These patterns produce a set of images over which global illumination and defocus effects remain constant for each point in the scene. This enables high quality reconstructions of scenes which have traditionally been considered hard, using only a small number of images. We also derive theoretical lower bounds on the number of input images needed for phase shifting and show that Micro PS achieves the bound.
Computer science
2012 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Piscataway, N.J.
IEEE
813
820
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/CVPR.2012.6247753
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:14833
NNC
NNC
2012-10-08 12:36:35 -0400
2012-10-08 12:50:45 -0400
8837
eng