1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an automotive camera system that recognizes an image of an environment around a vehicle, as well as its calibration method and calibration program.
2. Background Art
An automotive camera system including an image taking unit and an image processing device has objects to improve the convenience of a vehicle, achieve driving safety, and perform advanced position correction of a car navigation, and the role of the automotive camera system is becoming increasingly important. Along with development in image processing technology, a wide variety of techniques have been developed for recognizing a road surface or indications and objects on a road. Consequently, techniques for recognizing an image of an environment around a vehicle to perform vehicle control for lane departure prevention, collision avoidance, autocruise, and the like have also been developed and started to be put into practical use. Such vehicle control requires a measurement technique for measuring a relative position of a recognition target object with respect to the vehicle. In the case where this measurement technique is implemented by a camera, it is necessary to associate a pixel on an image with the corresponding position in the real space with the use of: extrinsic parameters of the camera indicating the position and attitude of the camera; and intrinsic parameters indicating an optic axis position, a focal length, lens distortion, and the like. The extrinsic parameters and the intrinsic parameters, which are set on the basis of design values, have inevitable errors in reality, and hence calibration for correcting deviation between the pixel and the real space is necessary to express a true correspondence relation therebetween.
JP Patent Publication (Kokai) No. 2004-200819 A describes a technique for correcting an optic axis of a camera using a reference marker. For the optic axis correction, it is necessary to prepare the reference marker. The reference marker needs to be set to a position at which a relative relation between the reference marker and the camera is determined. In the case of an automotive camera, the position of the camera needs to be determined in the state where the camera is set. That is, equipment for vehicle positioning is necessary. For the reason of costs required for such positioning equipment, it is desirable to obtain a mechanism that enables calibration of the camera without the positioning.
JP Patent Publication (Kokai) No. 2008-011174 A describes a method of correcting, even during vehicle running, an optic axis of an automotive camera and a camera height on the basis of information on a road sign that is obtained on a road with high frequency. This method does not require equipment investment for calibration, and thus is superior in cost reduction. This method however can correct only the optic axis of the automotive camera and the information on the road sign, and cannot correct intrinsic parameters such as lens distortion and an optic axis and extrinsic parameters other than the camera height, such as a set position of the camera. In particular, fisheye cameras are greatly affected by lens distortion, and hence it is desirable that the lens distortion can also be corrected.
The present invention, which has been made in view of the above, has an object to provide an automotive camera system that can easily calibrate intrinsic parameters and extrinsic parameters of an image taking unit, as well as its calibration method and calibration program.
In order to achieve the above-mentioned object, the present invention provides a calibration method for an automotive camera system, the method including: taking an image around a vehicle; recognizing a recognition target object including a preset straight line portion, from the taken image, and extracting feature points of the recognition target object from the image; projecting the extracted feature points onto a virtual spherical surface, estimating an intrinsic parameter of an image taking unit on a basis of a shape of a feature point sequence formed on the virtual spherical surface, and calibrating the estimated intrinsic parameter; and calculating an overhead point of view of the image on a basis of the extracted feature points, estimating an extrinsic parameter of the image taking unit on a basis of the calculated overhead point of view, and calibrating the estimated extrinsic parameter.
Further, in order to achieve the above-mentioned object, the present invention provides an automotive camera system including: an image taking unit that takes an image around a vehicle; a feature point extracting unit that recognizes a recognition target object including a preset straight line portion, from the image taken by the image taking unit, and extracts feature points of the recognition target object from the image; an intrinsic parameter calibrating unit that projects the feature points extracted by the feature point extracting unit onto a virtual spherical surface, estimates an intrinsic parameter of the image taking unit on a basis of a shape of a feature point sequence formed on the virtual spherical surface, and calibrates the estimated intrinsic parameter; and an extrinsic parameter calibrating unit that calculates an overhead point of view of the image on a basis of the feature points extracted by the feature point extracting unit, estimates an extrinsic parameter of the image taking unit on a basis of the calculated overhead point of view, and calibrates the estimated extrinsic parameter.
Further, in order to achieve the above-mentioned object, the present invention provides a calibration program for an automotive camera system to be executed by an image processing device, the calibration program including: recognizing a recognition target object including a preset straight line portion, from an image around a vehicle taken by an image taking unit of the automotive camera system, and extracting feature points of the recognition target object from the image; projecting the extracted feature points onto a virtual spherical surface, estimating an intrinsic parameter of the image taking unit on a basis of a shape of a feature point sequence formed on the virtual spherical surface, and calibrating the estimated intrinsic parameter; and calculating an overhead point of view of the image on a basis of the extracted feature points, estimating an extrinsic parameter of the image taking unit on a basis of the calculated overhead point of view, and calibrating the estimated extrinsic parameter.
According to the present invention, the intrinsic parameter and the extrinsic parameter of the image taking unit can be easily calibrated. Note that objects, configurations, and effects other than those described above will be clarified by way of an embodiment described below.
Hereinafter, an embodiment of the present invention is described in detail with reference to the drawings.
For example, as illustrated in
In the present embodiment, four cameras that each monitor an area around the vehicle are attached as the image taking units 307, 308, 309, and 310, but any number (equal to or more than one) of cameras may be attached.
Further, the attachment position and attitude of each camera may be freely determined as long as the camera can take an image of a road surface. Further, infrared cameras and various other cameras may be adopted for the cameras, because the viewing angle of each camera, the type of its imaging element, characteristics of its lens, and the like are not particularly limited. Similarly, any particular limits are not put on all portions stated as the image taking units 307, 308, 309, and 310 in the description below, unless otherwise specified.
The image processing device 105 is configured in, for example, an ECU of the automotive camera system, and executes a calibration program installed in advance, to thereby implement internal functions such as a feature point extracting unit 301, an intrinsic parameter calibrating unit 303, and an extrinsic parameter calibrating unit 304 to be described later.
The image processing device 105 recognizes a recognition target object including a preset straight line portion, such as a white line and a road marker, from an image taken by each of the image taking units 307, 308, 309, and 310, and extracts predetermined feature points or feature lines from the image. Then, the image processing device 105 estimates camera parameters including distortion (an optic axis, the distortion, a pixel aspect ratio, a focal length, and the three-dimensional set position and set attitude of the camera), from the extracted information.
Here, the distortion is defined. The distortion refers to, for example, a state as illustrated in
[Expression 1]
r=k
1
θ+k
2θ3+k3θ5+ (1)
In this expression, θ denotes the incident angle of light on a lens. k1, k2, k3 . . . each denote a distortion factor, which determines the shape of distortion. r denotes a distance of an imaging position from the optic axis in the case of the incident angle θ and the distortion factors k1, k2, k3 . . . . The relation of these elements is illustrated in
In
Fisheye cameras are provided with designed distortion in order to take an image in a wide area. According to an orthographic projection method, a stereographic projection method, and an equal area projection method that are fisheye models, description using functions of sin and tan is possible, and hence it is sufficient to estimate only odd-order terms in a distortion model formula.
Next, the detail of the automotive camera system is described with reference to
As illustrated in
In the image processing device 105, first, the feature point extracting unit 301 processes the input image, and extracts therefrom feature points necessary for calibration. In the present embodiment, the feature point extracting unit 301 extracts, as the feature points, a point sequence on an edge of a linear object (such as a white line, a crosswalk, a stop line, an indication for a crosswalk, a speed indication, a wall surface of a building, and other signs) in the real space. Any object may be extracted as long as the object is linear in the real space. The feature point extracting unit 301 determines an object to be recognized, for example, a crosswalk. Upon recognition of the object, the feature point extracting unit 301 carries out a process of defining an edge point sequence of the object as feature points.
Alternatively, as illustrated in
The intrinsic parameter calibrating unit 303 calibrates intrinsic parameters using the feature points extracted by the feature point extracting unit 301 or by the feature point extracting unit 301 and the feature point selecting unit 302.
An example method of correcting a distortion parameter is described. For estimation of the distortion parameter, with the use of a line that should be a straight line in the real space but is taken as a curved line due to lens distortion, the distortion parameter is adjusted such that the curved line becomes a straight line. Then, a point sequence on the curved line is defined as feature points, and the feature points thus defined are used. This is achieved by, for example, a calibration method using properties indicated by feature points projected onto a spherical surface.
This calibration method is described with reference to
The image taking unit 610 takes an image of a recognition target object 602 including a preset straight line portion, such as a crosswalk, so that a taken image 611 is obtained. Straight lines 612 and 613 respectively corresponding to straight line portions 621 and 622 of the recognition target object 602 are displayed on the taken image 611. In the case where the straight lines 612 and 613 of the taken image 611 are projected onto the virtual spherical surface 601, the straight lines 612 and 613 respectively coincide with parts of large circles 603 and 604 on the virtual spherical surface 601. The large circles 603 and 604 are outer circumferential circles each defined by a cross-section passing through the spherical center O of the virtual spherical surface 601.
For the adjustment of the distortion parameter, a cost function including the distortion parameter is designed so as to be minimized when the feature point sequence coincides with a part of the large circle, and the distortion parameter that minimizes the cost function is estimated according to an optimization method. The cost function is expressed by, for example, the following Expression (2).
In this expression, n1 denotes a normal vector that is estimated from a pth point p1p in a group of points obtained by projecting, onto a spherical surface, feature points on an 1th curved line displayed on an image. This cost function means that a normal vector of the large circle estimated using the feature point sequence should be orthogonal to a vector expressing actual feature points if the feature points are on the large circle. Here, the following expression is established.
p
1p=[sin θ cos φ, sin θ sin φ, cos θ]
where σ denotes an angle of deviation when the feature point p1p is mapped onto an image plane and coordinates thereof are expressed in polar coordinates. Further, with the use of an expression for associating the real space with image coordinates, this cost function includes parameters regarding an optic axis, the aspect ratio of a unit imaging element, a focal length, and distortion in a tangential direction, to thereby enable correction of not only the distortion parameter but also various intrinsic parameters. The above-mentioned method is given as a mere example, and another method of estimating the intrinsic parameters may be adopted.
Next, a method of estimating extrinsic parameters is described.
The extrinsic parameters refer to a camera position and a camera attitude of an image taking unit in the real space. The camera position refers to a lens center (xc, yc, zc) of the image taking unit in a world coordinate system (x, y, z) (
The extrinsic parameter calibrating unit 304 carries out the calibration using the images inputted by the image taking units 307, 308, 309, and 310 and the distortion parameter and the intrinsic parameters estimated by the intrinsic parameter calibrating unit 303.
Hereinafter, an example calibration method for the extrinsic parameters is described with reference to
First, how to obtain the pitch is described. The pitch having the X axis as its rotational axis is estimated on the basis of properties of feature points after distortion correction.
For example, a recognition target object 911 displayed on an actual image 901 is a road marker, and includes: a white line 912 that extends in the transverse direction; and a plurality of parallel white lines 913, 913 . . . that are orthogonal to the white line 912, extend in the vehicle travelling direction, and are placed so as to be parallel to each other at predetermined intervals in the transverse direction.
In the case where the recognition target object 911 is viewed from directly above and an overhead image 902 thereof is taken, edge point sequences 923 constituting the parallel white lines 913 of the recognition target object 911 should be parallel to each other also on the overhead image 902. In other words, the point of view at which the edge point sequences 923 constituting parallel components of the recognition target object 911 are parallel to each other corresponds to the point of view (overhead point of view) at which the recognition target object 911 is viewed from directly above.
Accordingly, how much the pitch needs to be changed from the current point of view in order to reach the overhead point of view is calculated. Further, how much the pitch needs to be changed in order to reach the overhead point of view when the camera is set as its design value is also calculated. A difference between these two amounts of pitch change is obtained, whereby the amount of optic axis deviation in the pitch direction from its design value can be estimated. Then, a parameter of the pitch as one of the extrinsic parameters can be calibrated on the basis of the estimated amount of optic axis deviation.
The amount of pitch change regarding how much the pitch needs to be changed from the current point of view in order to reach the overhead point of view can be calculated by designing a cost function and optimizing the cost function for the pitch. The cost function may be designed as follows.
In this function, vp and vq denote vectors each expressing a straight line approximated by an edge point sequence, on an image on which the intrinsic parameters are corrected. C denotes all combinations of the straight lines on the image. This is a function having the smallest value in the case where the approximated straight lines of the edge point sequences constituting parallel components on the image are parallel to each other.
Coordinates (u′, v′) of an edge point after point-of-view conversion can be expressed by the following expression
with the use of the following rotation matrix regarding the pitch.
In these expressions, (u, v) denotes image coordinates before point-of-view conversion, s denotes a scale factor in the case of projection onto an image plane, and A denotes an intrinsic parameter matrix. Assuming that a pitch angle for obtaining an overhead point of view obtained through optimization is θ̂ohv and a pitch angle for obtaining an overhead point of view from the design value is θohv, an amount of deviation Δθ from the design value of the pitch angle is obtained by the following expression.
Δθ=θ̂ohv−θohv
On this occasion, a state of the vehicle needs to be considered. For example, the pitch angle is also influenced by a change in vehicle attitude due to a change in load caused by breaking or steering. In order to correctly obtain the amount of deviation in a steady state, image data taken when such a change in load does not occur needs to be used. For example, the following mechanism is used. That is, information on the amount of breaking or steering is acquired from a CAN, and it is determined whether or not an action occurs, the action regarding a change in attitude due to a change in load caused by the breaking or steering.
Such a mechanism enables knowing the amount of attitude change conversely. This can be achieved by obtaining a pitch angle for obtaining the overhead point of view for each of the case where a change in load occurs and a steady state and calculating a difference between the obtained pitch angles. The above-mentioned method of calculating the amount of deviation of the pitch angle is given as a mere example, and another method may be adopted.
Next, how to obtain the yaw is described. The yaw is estimated on the basis of orthogonality 931 of a straight line. Similarly to the pitch, how much the yaw needs to be changed in order to reach an ideal overhead point of view is calculated. If the yaw is changed, the white line 912 in the horizontal direction of the image 901 illustrated in
That is, how much the yaw needs to be changed from the current point of view in order to reach the overhead point of view is calculated. Further, how much the yaw needs to be changed in order to reach the overhead point of view when the camera is set as its design value is also calculated. A difference between these two amounts of yaw change is obtained, whereby the amount of optic axis deviation in the yaw direction from its design value can be estimated. Then, a parameter of the yaw as one of the extrinsic parameters can be calibrated on the basis of the estimated amount of optic axis deviation.
Next, how to obtain the camera height is described. The camera height is estimated on the basis of the interval between straight lines parallel to each other. For example, in the case of the recognition target object 911 illustrated in
Accordingly, for example, the camera height is defined as a variable, and a cost function that becomes the smallest when the interval between straight lines becomes a given value is set. Then, the camera height that minimizes the cost function is obtained according to an optimization method, whereby the camera height that generates an ideal overhead view can be estimated.
The cost function is expressed by, for example, the following expression.
In this function, vp and vq denote vectors each expressing a straight line after pitch correction. b2 denotes a second major component average value of each straight line after pitch correction, and vp·b2 denotes a second major component average vector direction component of vp. dpq denotes a difference on the second major component axis based on q between straight lines p and q. Np and Nq denote the number of feature points on the straight line p and the number of feature points on the straight line q, respectively.
Accordingly, the amount of camera height deviation from its design value can be estimated by obtaining a difference between the estimated camera height and the camera height when the camera is set as its design value. Then, a parameter of the camera height as one of the extrinsic parameters can be calibrated on the basis of the estimated amount of camera height deviation.
Next, how to obtain a roll angle and a translation components is described with reference to
A vehicle 1003 has four cameras (front, back, left, and right cameras) mounted thereon as image taking units, and description is given of the case where the roll and the translation components are calibrated between the front camera and the right camera. A correction method for the other cameras is similar.
Lastly, the roll and the position (xc, yc, zc) of the camera are estimated. The roll and the position of the camera are estimated by image alignment between the cameras. An overhead image 1001 converted into an overhead point of view is generated using the parameters of the front camera obtained in the above-mentioned processes. The overhead image is generated by converting an image of the front camera into an image of an overhead camera that is assumed to exist at the overhead point of view. Camera parameters of the overhead camera may be set to desired values so as to suit a view to be displayed. Similarly, an overhead image 1002 is generated by converting an image of the right camera into an image at the overhead point of view taken by the same overhead camera. That is, the overhead images 1001 and 1002 are taken at the same point of view.
If the calibration is completed, the images 1001 and 1002 do not have any deviation. In reality, however, the front, back, left, and right cameras cannot avoid deviation deriving from errors from design values of the roll and the set position. Accordingly, the roll and the camera position (xc, yc, zc) are estimated such that deviation in the overhead image 1001 and the overhead image 1002 is eliminated. An image region 1003 is set to the overhead camera image in order to determine deviation in the images. In the image region 1003, an image taking target common to overlapping image taking regions of the front and right cameras is displayed. The roll and the camera position (xc, yc, zc) are corrected such that the camera views in this region coincide with each other.
Various correction methods can be conceived. For example, the overhead view of the front camera is defined as a reference, and the roll and the camera position (xc, yc, zc) are corrected such that the overhead view of the right camera coincides with the overhead view of the front camera. In the case where the overhead view of the front camera has remarkable deviation, this correction method causes deviation in the roll and the camera position (xc, yc, zc) of another camera, and hence another correction method may be adopted. For example, in the case where it is known that deviation in the set position of the camera is small, deviation in an overhead view due to errors of the parameters is also small. Hence, only the roll is first corrected such that the images coincide with each other as far as possible, and the camera position (xc, yc, zc) may be then finely modified. An optimization method for images such as the Lucas-Kanade method is used for the image alignment. Alternatively, feature information such as feature points extracted from the image and an equation of an edge straight line may be used for the image alignment.
The correction method between two cameras is as described above. Similar correction between two cameras is repeated, whereby correction among four cameras is carried out. For example, the correction is carried out between the front camera and the right camera, between the front camera and the left camera, and the right and left cameras and the back camera in the stated order. Another correction order may be adopted. Further, the correction may be repeatedly carried out as appropriate.
The image alignment is carried out such that the amounts of feature such as image brightnesses or image edge intensities of the cameras coincide with each other. If the translation components and rotational parameters of each camera are finely changed, how the overhead image looks changes. These parameters are changed until the overhead images coincide with each other, thus achieving the image alignment. The translation and the rotational parameters that allow the same view between the two cameras (the front camera and the right camera) are parameters to be obtained through the optimization.
A cost function that becomes the smallest when image brightnesses or image edge intensities of the cameras coincide with each other is designed, and parameters that enable the overhead images to coincide with each other are estimated, that is, the calibration is carried out by minimizing the cost function. Alternatively, instead of alignment of images themselves, correction may be carried out such that equations of the corresponding straight lines coincide with each other.
Alternatively, instead of alignment of images themselves, correction may be carried out such that equations of the corresponding straight lines coincide with each other. Specifically, an equation of a white line on an image is calculated, and image alignment is carried out such that the equations of the corresponding white lines between images coincide with each other. The corresponding white lines between the images refer to the same white line in a three-dimensional space. The translation and the rotational parameters of each camera are finely changed until the overhead images coincide with each other, whereby the white line equations can be made coincident with each other. A cost function that becomes the smallest when the corresponding white line equations coincide with each other is designed, and the translation and the rotational parameters that minimize the cost function are estimated, that is, the calibration is carried out.
According to the automotive camera system 1 having the above-mentioned configuration, if properties such as parallelism, linearity, and an interval are known, both the intrinsic parameters and the extrinsic parameters of each camera can be calibrated using the known properties. For example, although there are variations in a range of a line width, a crosswalk and the like can be used as a target for the calibration. That is, the calibration is possible using only a road sign without preparing a special reference marker or equipment for a vehicle. Height adjustment varies correspondingly to an error of a white line width, but effects can be expected in the case where strict position display is not required.
If the calibration is possible only by using a crosswalk, however, chances of the calibration are smaller. It is desirable that the calibration be possible using only a simple white line for lane indication or a linear structure in a vehicle running scene. Unfortunately, according to this method, the calibration is not possible using only a single white line. Accordingly, in order to obtain as many chances of the calibration as possible during vehicle running, it is necessary to gather information during the vehicle running and create target information necessary for the calibration.
Accordingly, description is given of a method of acquiring feature information that is necessary for the calibration in order to increase the number of scenes in which the calibration is possible during the vehicle running. A desirable target therefor is an object that frequently appears on a road and has linearity and parallelism, such as a white line for lane indication. The interval can be defined structurally to some degree, and information on the defined interval can be used. Note that, in the case where white lines are photographed once, only one set of the parallel white lines is obtained. The calibration requires a plurality of straight lines, and hence this information is insufficient. That is, the calibration requires information on the distance between a white line photographed at one position and the white line photographed at another position.
The white line photographed at another position is, for example, a while line photographed at the time of changing lanes. At the time of changing lanes, the relative position between a white line and a vehicle largely changes. Hence, if coordinate positions of the white line are stored at various relative position relations, such a situation that a plurality of white lines are photographed at the same time can be created. For a white line in another direction, for example, edge information on a stop line may be stored during the vehicle running. Although the parallelism between white lines cannot be kept, the parallelism of a rising edge and a falling edge of one white line can be secured. This needs to be satisfied at the same time at a plurality of portions on an image, and thus can apply to constraint conditions. Information on the interval between the white lines can be obtained by, for example, calculating the movement direction and the amount of movement of feature points from the speed and steering of a target vehicle.
In this way, information necessary for the calibration is gathered during the vehicle running, and a target is created, whereby the intrinsic parameters and the extrinsic parameters can be corrected during the vehicle running. That is, a process of photographing one white line at different times and obtaining the distance between the white lines is repeated, whereby a plurality of parallel straight lines and information on the interval therebetween can be acquired from one white line. If this process is performed on, for example, a white line for lane indication and a stop line, a calibration target can be configured. Accordingly, even in the case where a recognition target object convenient for the calibration, such as a crosswalk, does not exist, if a linear structure such as a white line exists, feature information necessary for the calibration can be generated.
A specific process therefor is described below.
First, an image is acquired during vehicle running at a time point t. Then, a white line on the image is recognized. Both the rising edge and the falling edge of the recognized white line are extracted as feature points. Subsequently, information on the extracted feature points is stored into a memory. Then, an image photographed at a next time point t+1 is acquired. The time point interval may be set to a desired value. The white line on the image photographed at the next time point t+1 is similarly recognized, and the rising edge and the falling edge thereof are extracted as feature points. On this occasion, if the relative position of the feature points at the time point t+1 has changed by a predetermined amount or more from the position of the feature points at the time point t, the feature points are stored into the memory. For the change by the predetermined amount or more, the amount of movement of a target vehicle is calculated from the speed and steering of the vehicle, and if the calculated amount is equal to or more than a predetermined value, it is determined that the vehicle has moved. At the same time, the amount of movement and the movement direction of the vehicle are also recorded. Determination thereof may be made on the basis of coordinates of the feature points obtained through the image recognition. The amount of movement of the vehicle is used to calculate the distance between the white lines necessary for the calibration.
Now, how to measure the interval between feature points is described. A feature point photographed at a given time point t is defined as pt. The same feature point photographed at the time point t+1 is defined as pt+1. Normally, the three-dimensional distance (the distance in the real space) between these two points photographed by a camera cannot be determined without necessary information such as set information of the camera. If information on the speed and steering of the vehicle is obtained, however, the three-dimensional distance between pt and pt+1 can be obtained. This is because pt and pt+1 are the same point but photographed at different positions, and the three-dimensional distance between these two points viewed from the camera is equal to the amount of movement of the vehicle. Accordingly, the movement direction and the amount of movement of the vehicle are calculated from the information on the speed and steering of the vehicle, whereby the three-dimensional distance between pt and pt+1 can be obtained. A technique of estimating the amount of movement of the vehicle from the speed and steering of the vehicle is a generally adopted technique called dead reckoning.
The above-mentioned process is repeated for t+2, t+3, . . . , whereby information necessary for the calibration is collected. That is, coordinates of a feature point photographed at each time point (feature point coordinates at t, feature point coordinates at t+1, feature point coordinates at t+2, feature point coordinates at t+3, . . . ) is held in the memory, and the information is accumulated therein, whereby information to be required for a target is configured. On this occasion, the white line photographed at the time point t and the white line photographed at the time point t+1 do not necessarily need to be the same.
For the configuration of the target, the above-mentioned process is continued until at least two white lines in the vertical direction and information on the interval therebetween, as well as at least two white lines in the horizontal direction and information on the interval therebetween, are recorded for each camera image. For example, it is possible to use images of a stop line and a white line for a driving lane that are photographed at different relative positions. If this feature point information is distributed in a wide region that reaches a screen end with large distortion and a screen central portion with small distortion, in other words, the left end, right end, upper end, and lower end of an image, the feature point information contributes improvement in calibration accuracy. Hence, it is desirable to collect feature point information distributed as wide a region as possible.
Further, any line type (such as a broken line, a solid line, and a double line) may be adopted for a white line for driving lane indication as long as an edge can be extracted from a linear structure. Moreover, a road sign including linear components, such as a road sign indicating the existence of a crosswalk, may be adopted.
Hereinabove, the embodiment of the present invention is described in detail. The present invention is not limited to the above-mentioned embodiment, and designs thereof can be variously changed in a range not departing from the spirits of the present invention described in What is claimed is. For example, the above-mentioned embodiment is described in detail for the purpose of easy understanding of the present invention, and hence the present invention is not necessarily limited to a structure including all the described configurations. Further, part of configurations of one embodiment can be replaced with configurations of another embodiment, and configurations of one embodiment can be added to configurations of another embodiment. Moreover, addition, deletion, and replacement of a given configuration are possible for part of configurations of each embodiment.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2011-258663 | Nov 2011 | JP | national |