The present invention relates generally to determining pose parameters (position and orientation parameters) of an optical apparatus in a stable frame, the pose parameters of the optical apparatus being recovered from image data collected by the optical apparatus and being imbued with a structural uncertainty that necessitates deployment of a reduced homography.
When an item moves without any constraints (freely) in a three-dimensional environment with respect to stationary objects, knowledge of the item's distance and inclination to one or more of such stationary objects can be used to derive a variety of the item's parameters of motion, as well as its complete pose. The latter includes the item's three position parameters, usually expressed by three coordinates (x, y, z), and its three orientation parameters, usually expressed by three angles (α, β, γ) in any suitably chosen rotation convention (e.g., Euler angles (ψ, θ, φ) or quaternions). Particularly useful stationary objects for pose recovery purposes include ground planes, fixed points, lines, reference surfaces and other known features.
Many mobile electronics items are now equipped with advanced optical apparatus such as on-board cameras with photo-sensors, including high-resolution CMOS arrays. These devices typically also possess significant on-board processing resources (e.g., CPUs and GPUs) as well as network connectivity (e.g., connection to the Internet, Cloud services and/or a link to a Local Area Network (LAN)). These resources enable many techniques from the fields of robotics and computer vision to be practiced with the optical apparatus on-board such virtually ubiquitous devices. Most importantly, vision algorithms for recovering the camera's extrinsic parameters, namely its position and orientation, also frequently referred to as its pose, can now be applied in many practical situations.
An on-board camera's extrinsic parameters in the three dimensional environment are typically recovered by viewing a sufficient number of non-collinear optical features belonging to the known stationary object or objects. In other words, the on-board camera first records on its photo-sensor (which may be a pixelated device or even a position sensing device (PSD) having one or just a few “pixels”) the images of space points, space lines and space planes belonging to one or more of these known stationary objects. A computer vision algorithm to recover the camera's extrinsic parameters is then applied to the imaged features of the actual stationary object(s). The imaged features usually include points, lines and planes of the actual stationary object(s) that yield a good optical signal. In other words, the features are chosen such that their images exhibit a high degree of contrast and are easy to isolate in the image taken by the photo-sensor. Of course, the imaged features are recorded in a two-dimensional (2D) projective plane associated with the camera's photo-sensor, while the real or space features of the one or more stationary objects are found in the three-dimensional (3D) environment.
Certain 3D information is necessarily lost when projecting an image of actual 3D stationary objects onto the 2D image plane. The mapping between the 3D Euclidean space of the three-dimensional environment and the 2D projective plane of the camera is not one-to-one. Many assumptions of Euclidean geometry are lost during such mapping (sometimes also referred to as projectivity). Notably, lengths, angles and parallelism are not preserved. Euclidean geometry is therefore insufficient to describe the imaging process. Instead, projective geometry, and specifically perspective projection is deployed to recover the camera's pose from images collected by the photo-sensor residing in the camera's 2D image plane.
Fortunately, projective transformations do preserve certain properties. These properties include type (that is, points remain points and lines remain lines), incidence (that is, when a point lies on a line it remains on the line), as well as an invariant measure known as the cross ratio. For a review of projective geometry the reader is referred to H. X. M. Coexter, Projective Geometry, Toronto: University of Toronto, 2nd Edition, 1974; O. Faugeras, Three-Dimensional Computer Vision, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1993; L. Guibas, “Lecture Notes for CSS4Sa: Computer Graphics—Mathematical Foundations”, Stanford University, Autumn 1996; Q.-T. Luong and O. D. Faugeras, “Fundamental Matrix: Theory, algorithms and stability analysis”, International Journal of Computer Vision, 17(1): 43-75, 1996; J. L. Mundy and A. Zisserman, Geometric Invariance in Computer Vision, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1992 as well as Z. Zhang and G. Xu, Epipolar Geometry in Stereo, Motion and Object Recognition: A Unified Approach. Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1996.
At first, many practitioners deployed concepts from perspective geometry directly to pose recovery. In other words, they would compute vanishing points, horizon lines, cross ratios and apply Desargues theorem directly. Although mathematically simple on their face, in many practical situations such approaches end up in tedious trigonometric computations. Furthermore, experience teaches that such computations are not sufficiently compact and robust in practice. This is due to many real-life factors including, among other, limited computation resources, restricted bandwidth and various sources of noise.
Modern computer vision has thus turned to more computationally efficient and robust approaches to camera pose recovery. An excellent overall review of this subject is found in Kenichi Kanatani, Geometric Computation for Machine Vision, Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press, New York, 1993. A number of important foundational aspects of computational geometry relevant to pose recovery via machine vision are reviewed below to the benefit of those skilled in the art and in order to better contextualize the present invention.
To this end, we will now review several relevant concepts in reference to
Camera 20 has an imaging lens 22 and a photo-sensor 24 with a number of photosensitive pixels 26 arranged in an array. A common choice for photo-sensor 24 in today's consumer electronics devices are CMOS arrays, although other technologies can also be used depending on application (e.g., CCD, PIN photodiode, position sensing device (PSD) or still other photo-sensing technology). Imaging lens 22 has a viewpoint O and a certain focal length f. Viewpoint O lies on an optical axis OA. Photo-sensor 24 is situated in an image plane at focal length f behind viewpoint O along optical axis OA.
Camera 20 typically works with electromagnetic (EM) radiation 30 that is in the optical or infrared (IR) wavelength range (note that deeper sensor wells are required in cameras working with IR and far-IR wavelengths). Radiation 30 emanates or is reflected (e.g., reflected ambient EM radiation) from non-collinear optical features such as screen corners 16A, 16B, 16C and 16D. Lens 22 images EM radiation 30 on photo-sensor 24. Imaged points or corner images 16A′, 16B′, 16C′, 16D′ thus imaged on photo-sensor 24 by lens 22 are usually inverted when using a simple refractive lens. Meanwhile, certain more compound lens designs, including designs with refractive and reflective elements (catadioptrics) can yield non-inverted images.
A projective plane 28 conventionally used in computational geometry is located at focal length f away from viewpoint O along optical axis OA but in front of viewpoint O rather than behind it. Note that a virtual image of corners 16A, 16B, 16C and 16D is also present in projective plane 28 through which the rays of electromagnetic radiation 30 pass. Because any rays in projective plane 28 have not yet passed through lens 22, the points representing corners 16A, 16B, 16C and 16D are not inverted. The methods of modern machine vision are normally applied to points in projective plane 28, while taking into account the properties of lens 22.
An ideal lens is a pinhole and the most basic approaches of machine vision make that an assumption. Practical lens 22, however, introduces distortions and aberrations (including barrel distortion, pincushion distortion, spherical aberration, coma, astigmatism, chromatic aberration, etc.). Such distortions and aberrations, as well as methods for their correction or removal are understood by those skilled in the art.
In the simple case shown in
Persons skilled in the art are familiar with camera calibration techniques. These include finding offsets, computing the effective focal length feff (or the related parameter k) and ascertaining distortion parameters (usually denoted by α's). Collectively, these parameters are called intrinsic and they can be calibrated in accordance with any suitable method. For teachings on camera calibration the reader is referred to the textbook entitled “Multiple View Geometry in Computer Vision” (Second Edition) by R. Hartley and Andrew Zisserman. Another useful reference is provided by Robert Haralick, “Using Perspective Transformations in Scene Analysis”, Computer Graphics and Image Processing 13, pp. 191-221 (1980). For still further information the reader is referred to Carlo Tomasi and John Zhang, “How to Rotate a Camera”, Computer Science Department Publication, Stanford University and Berthold K. P. Horn, “Tsai's Camera Calibration Method Revisited”, which are herein incorporated by reference.
Additionally, image processing is required to discover corner images 16A′, 16B′, 16C′, 16D′ on sensor 24 of camera 20. Briefly, image processing includes image filtering, smoothing, segmentation and feature extraction (e.g., edge/line or corner detection). Corresponding steps are usually performed by segmentation and the application of mask filters such as Guassian/Laplacian/Laplacian-of-Gaussian (LoG)/Marr and/or other convolutions with suitable kernels to achieve desired effects (averaging, sharpening, blurring, etc.). Most common feature extraction image processing libraries include Canny edge detectors as well as Hough/Radon transforms and many others. Once again, all the relevant techniques are well known to those skilled in the art. A good review of image processing is afforded by “Digital Image Processing”, Rafael C. Gonzalez and Richard E. Woods, Prentice Hall, 3rd Edition, Aug. 31, 2007; “Computer Vision: Algorithms and Applications”, Richard Szeliski, Springer, Edition 2011, Nov. 24, 2010; Tinne Tuytelaars and Krystian Mikolajczyk, “Local Invariant Feature Detectors: A Survey”, Journal of Foundations and Trends in Computer Graphics and Vision, Vol. 3, Issue 3, January 2008, pp. 177-280. Furthermore, a person skilled in the art will find all the required modules in standard image processing libraries such as OpenCV (Open Source Computer Vision), a library of programming functions for real time computer vision. For more information on OpenCV the reader is referred to G. R. Bradski and A. Kaehler, “Learning OpenCV: Computer Vision with the OpenCV Library”, O'Reilly, 2008.
In
In the canonical pose, the rectangle defined by space points representing screen corners 16A, 16B, 16C and 16D maps to an inverted rectangle of corner images 16A′, 16B′, 16C′, 16D′ in the image plane on the surface of image sensor 24. Also, space points defined by screen corners 16A, 16B, 16C and 16D map to a non-inverted rectangle in projective plane 28. Therefore, in the canonical pose, the only apparent transformation performed by lens 22 of camera 20 is a scaling (de-magnification) of the image with respect to the actual object. Of course, mostly correctable distortions and aberrations are also present in the case of practical lens 22, as remarked above.
Recovery of poses (positions and orientations) assumed by camera 20 in environment 10 from a sequence of corresponding projections of space points representing screen corners 16A, 16B, 16C and 16D is possible because the absolute geometry of television 14 and in particular of its screen 18 and possibly other 3D structures providing optical features in environment 10 are known and can be used as reference. In other words, after calibrating lens 22 and observing the image of screen corners 16A, 16B, 16C, 16D and any other optical features from the canonical pose, the challenge of recovering parameters of absolute pose of camera 20 in three-dimensional environment 10 is solvable. Still more precisely put, as camera 20 changes its position and orientation and its viewpoint O travels along a trajectory 34 (a.k.a. extrinsic parameters) in world coordinates parameterized by axes (Xw,Yw,Zw), only the knowledge of corner images 16A′, 16B′, 16C′, 16D′ in camera coordinates parameterized by axes (Xc,Yc,Zc) can be used to recover the changes in pose or extrinsic parameters of camera 20. This exciting problem in computer and robotic vision has been explored for decades.
Referring to
A prior location of camera viewpoint O along trajectory 34 and an orientation of camera 20 at time t=t−1 are indicated by camera coordinates using camera axes (Xc,Yc,Zc) whose origin coincides with viewpoint O. Clearly, at time t=t−i camera 20 on-board tablet 36 is not in the canonical pose. The canonical pose, as shown in
Now, at time t=t1 tablet 36 has moved further along trajectory 34 from its canonical pose at time t=to to an unknown pose where camera 20 records corner images 16A′, 16B′, 16C′, 16D′ at the locations displayed on screen 38 in projective plane 28. Of course, camera 20 actually records corner images 16A′, 16B′, 16C′, 16D′ with pixels 26 of its sensor 24 located in the image plane defined by lens 22 (see
In the unknown camera pose at time t=t1 a television image 14′ and, more precisely screen image 18′ based on corner images 16A′, 16B′, 16C′, 16D′ exhibits a certain perspective distortion. By comparing this perspective distortion of the image at time t=t1 to the image obtained in the canonical pose (at time t=to or during camera calibration procedure) one finds the extrinsic parameters of camera 20 and, by extension, the pose of tablet 36. By performing this operation with a sufficient frequency, the entire rigid body motion of tablet 36 along trajectory 34 of viewpoint O can be digitized.
The corresponding computation is traditionally performed in projective plane 28 by using homogeneous coordinates and the rules of perspective projection as taught in the references cited above. For a representative prior art approach to pose recovery with respect to rectangles, such as presented by screen 18 and its corners 16A, 16B, 16C and 16D the reader is referred to T. N. Tan et al., “Recovery of Intrinsic and Extrinsic Camera Parameters Using Perspective Views of Rectangles”, Dept. of Computer Science, The University of Reading, Berkshire RG6 6AY, UK, 1996, pp. 177-186 and the references cited by that paper. Before proceeding, it should be stressed that although in the example chosen we are looking at rectangular screen 18 that can be analyzed by defining vanishing points and/or angle constraints on corners formed by its edges, pose recovery does not need to be based on corners of rectangles or structures that have parallel and orthogonal edges. In fact, the use of vanishing points is just the elementary way to recover pose. There are more robust and practical prior art methods that can be deployed in the presence of noise and when tracking more than four reference features (sometimes also referred to as fiducials) that do not need to form a rectangle or even a planar shape in real space. Indeed, the general approach applies to any set of fiducials defining an arbitrary 3D shape, as long as that shape is known.
For ease of explanation, however,
Recovery is performed with respect to the canonical pose shown in
In other words, the application of inverse rotation matrix R−1 and subtraction of translation vector
Also, if space points 16A, 16B, 16C and 16D are not identified with image points 16A′, 16B′, 16C′ and 16D′ then the in-plane orientation of screen 18 cannot be determined. This labeling or correspondence problem is clear from examining a candidate for recovered screen 18*.
Its recovered corner points 16A*, 16B*, 16C* and 16D* do not correspond to the correct ones of actual screen 18 that we want to find. The correspondence problem can be solved by providing information that uniquely identifies at least some of points 16A, 16B, 16C and 16D. Alternatively, additional space points that provide more optical features at known locations in room 10 can be used to break the symmetry of the problem. Otherwise, the space points can be encoded by any suitable methods and/or means. Of course, space points that present intrinsically asymmetric space patterns could be used as well.
Another problem is illustrated by candidate for recovered screen 18**, where candidate points 16A**, 16B**, 16C**, 16D** do lie along vectors pA, pB, pC and pD but are not coplanar. This structural defect is typically resolved by realizing from algebraic geometry that dot products of vectors that are used to represent the edges of candidate screen 18** not only need to be zero (to ensure orthogonal corners) but also that the triple product of these vectors needs to be zero. That is true, since the triple product of the edge vectors is zero for a rectangle. Still another way to remove the structural defect involves the use of cross ratios.
In addition to the above problems, there is noise. Thus, the practical challenge is not only in finding the right candidate based on structural constraints, but also distinguishing between possible candidates and choosing the best one in the presence of noise. In other words, the real-life problem of pose recovery is a problem of finding the best estimate for the transformation encoded by {R,
On the right,
The distribution of measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) normally obeys a standard noise statistic dictated by environmental conditions. When using high-quality camera 20, that distribution is thermalized based mostly on the illumination conditions in room 10, the brightness of screen 18 and edge/corner contrast (see
In some situations, however, the distribution of points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) does not fall within typical error region 44 accompanied by a few outliers 46. In fact, some cameras introduce persistent or even inherent structural uncertainty into the distribution of points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) found in the image plane on top of typical deviation 44 and outliers 46.
One typical example of such a situation occurs when the optical system of a camera introduces multiple reflections of bright light sources (which are prime candidates for space points to track) onto the sensor. This may be due to the many optical surfaces that are typically used in the imaging lenses of camera systems. In many cases, these multiple reflections can cause a number of ghost images along radial lines extending from the center of the sensor or camera center CC as shown in
In view of the shortcomings of the prior art, it is an object of the present invention to provide for recovering parameters of pose or extrinsic parameters of an optical apparatus up to and including complete pose recovery (all six parameters or degrees of freedom) in the presence of structural uncertainty that is introduced into the image data. The optical apparatus may itself be responsible for introducing the structural uncertainty and it can be embodied by a CMOS camera, a CCD sensor, a PIN diode sensor, a position sensing device (PSD), or still some other optical apparatus. In fact, the optical apparatus should be able to deploy any suitable optical sensor and associated imaging optics.
It is another object of the invention to support estimation of a homography representing the pose of an item that has the optical apparatus installed on-board. The approach should enable selection of an appropriate reduced representation of the image data (e.g., measured image points) based on the specific structural uncertainty. The reduced representation should support deployment of a reduced homography that permits the use of low quality cameras, including low-quality sensors and/or low-quality optics, to recover desired parameters of pose or even full pose of the item with the on-board optical apparatus despite the presence of structural uncertainty.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide for complementary data fusion with on-board inertial apparatus to allow for further reduction in quality or acquisition rate of optical data necessary to recover the pose of the optical apparatus or of the item with the on-board optical apparatus.
Still other objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent upon reading the detailed specification and reviewing the accompanying drawing figures.
The objects and advantages of the invention are provided for by a method and an optical apparatus for recovering pose parameters from imaged space points Pi using an optical sensor. The electromagnetic radiation from the space points Pi is recorded on the optical sensor at measured image coordinates {circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi that define the locations of measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) in the image plane. A structural uncertainty introduced in the measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) is determined. A reduced representation of the measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) is selected based on the type of structural uncertainty. The reduced representation includes rays {circumflex over (r)}i defined in homogeneous coordinates and contained in a projective plane of the optical apparatus. At least one pose parameter of the optical apparatus is then estimated with respect to a canonical pose of the optical apparatus by applying a reduced homography H that uses the rays {circumflex over (r)}i of the reduced representation.
When using the reduced representation resulting in reduced homography H it is important to set a condition on the motion of the optical apparatus based on the reduced representation. For example, the condition can be strict and enforced by a mechanism constraining the motion, including a mechanical constraint. In particular, the condition is satisfied by substantially bounding the motion to a reference plane. In practice, the condition does not have to be kept the same at all times. In fact, the condition can be adjusted based on one or more of the pose parameters of the optical apparatus. In most cases, the most useful pose parameters involve a linear pose parameter, i.e., a distance from a known point or plane in the environment.
The pose parameter or parameters used in adjusting the condition on the motion of the optical apparatus, or of an item that has such optical apparatus installed on-board, can be recovered independently of the pose estimation step that deploys the reduced homography H.
In some embodiments an auxiliary measurement can be performed to obtain the one or more pose parameters used for adjusting the condition. More precisely, an independent optical, acoustic, inertial or even RF measurement can be performed for this purpose. In the case of the optical measurement, the same optical apparatus can be deployed and the measurement can be a depth-from-defocus or a time-of-flight based measurement.
Depending on the embodiment, the type of optical apparatus and on the condition placed on the motion of the optical apparatus, the structural uncertainty will differ. In some embodiments, the structural uncertainty will be substantially radial, meaning that the uncertainty of measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) is uncertain along a radial direction from the center of the optical sensor or from the point of view O established by the optics of the optical apparatus. In other cases, the structural uncertainty will be substantially linear (e.g., along vertical or horizontal lines). Structural uncertainty differs from normal noise, which is mostly due to thermal noise, 1/f noise and shot noise, in that it exhibits a substantially larger spread than normal noise.
The present invention, including the preferred embodiment, will now be described in detail in the below detailed description with reference to the attached drawing figures.
The drawing figures and the following description relate to preferred embodiments of the present invention by way of illustration only. It should be noted that from the following discussion, alternative embodiments of the methods and systems disclosed herein will be readily recognized as viable options that may be employed without departing from the principles of the claimed invention. Likewise, the figures depict embodiments of the present invention for purposes of illustration only. One skilled in the art will readily recognize from the following description that alternative embodiments of the methods and systems illustrated herein may be employed without departing from the principles of the invention described herein.
The present invention will be best understood by initially referring to
CMOS camera 104 has a viewpoint O from which it views environment 100. In general, item 102 is understood herein to be any object that is equipped with an on-board optical unit and is manipulated by a user or even worn by the user. For some additional examples of suitable items the reader is referred to U.S. Published Application 2012/0038549 to Mandella et al.
Environment 100 is not only stable, but it is also known. This means that the locations of exemplary stationary objects 106, 108, 110, 112, 114, 116 present in environment 100 and embodied by a refrigerator, a corner between two walls and a ceiling, a table, a microwave oven, a toaster and a kitchen stove, respectively, are known prior to practicing a reduced homography H according to the invention. More precisely still, the locations of non-collinear optical features designated here by space points P1, P2, . . . , Pi and belonging to refrigerator 106, corner 108, table 110, microwave oven 112, toaster 114 and kitchen stove 116 are known prior to practicing reduced homography H of the invention.
A person skilled in the art will recognize that working in known environment 100 is a fundamentally different problem from working in an unknown environment. In the latter case, optical features are also available, but their locations in the environment are not known a priori. Thus, a major part of the challenge is to construct a model of the unknown environment before being able to recover any of the camera's extrinsic parameters (position and orientation in the environment, together defining the pose). The present invention applies to known environment 100 in which the positions of objects 106, 108, 110, 112, 114, 116 and hence of the non-collinear optical features P1, P2, . . . , P9 are known a priori, e.g., either from prior measurements, surveys or calibration procedures that may include non-optical measurements, as discussed in more detail below.
The actual non-collinear optical features designated by space points Pl, P2, . . . , P9 can be any suitable, preferably high optical contrast parts, markings or aspects of objects 106, 108, 110, 112, 114, 116. The optical features can be passive, active (i.e., emitting electromagnetic radiation) or reflective (even retro-reflective if illumination from on-board item 102 is deployed, e.g., in the form of a flash). In the present embodiment, optical feature designated by space point P1 is a corner of refrigerator 106 that offers inherently high optical contrast because of its location against the walls. Corner 108 designated by space point P2 is also high optical contrast. Table 110 has two optical features designated by space points P3 and P6, which correspond to its back corner and the highly reflective metal support on its front leg. Microwave oven 112 offers high contrast feature denoted by space point P4 representing its top reflective identification plate. Space point P5 corresponds to the optical feature represented by a shiny handle of toaster 114. Finally, space points P7, P8 and P9 are optical features belonging to kitchen stove 116 and they correspond to a marking in the middle of the baking griddle, an LED display and a lighted turn knob, respectively.
It should be noted that any physical features, as long as their optical image is easy to discern, can serve the role of optical features. Preferably, more than just four optical features are selected in order to ensure better performance in pose recovery and to ensure that a sufficient number of them, preferably at least four, remain in the field of view of CMOS camera 104, even when some are obstructed, occluded or unusable for any other reasons. In the subsequent description, we will refer simply to space points P1, P2, . . . , P9 as space points Pi or non-collinear optical features interchangeably. It will also be understood by those skilled in the art that the choice of space points Pi can be changed at any time, e.g., when image analysis reveals space points that offer higher optical contrast than those used at the time or when other space points offer optically advantageous characteristics. For example, the distribution of the space points along with additional new space points presents a better geometrical distribution (e.g., a larger convex hull) and is hence preferable for pose recovery.
As already indicated, camera 104 of smart phone 102 sees environment 100 from point of view O. Point of view O is defined by the design of camera 104 and, in particular, by the type of optics camera 104 deploys. In
In deploying reduced homography H a certain condition has to be placed on the motion of phone 102 and hence of camera 104. The condition depends on the type of reduced homography H. The condition is satisfied in the present embodiment by bounding the motion of phone 102 to a reference plane 118. This confinement does not need to be exact and it can be periodically reevaluated or changed, as will be explained further below. Additionally, a certain forward displacement εf and a certain back displacement εb away from reference plane 118 are permitted. Note that the magnitudes of displacements εf, εb do not have to be equal.
The condition is thus indicated by the general volume 120, which is the volume bounded by parallel planes at εf and εb and containing reference plane 118. This condition means that a trajectory 122 executed by viewpoint O of camera 104 belonging to phone 102 is confined to volume 120. Indeed, this condition is obeyed by trajectory 122 as shown in
Phone 102 has a display screen 124. To aid in the explanation of the invention, screen 124 shows what the optical sensor (not shown in the present drawing) of camera 104 sees or records. Thus, display screen 124 at time t=to, as shown in the lower enlarged portion of
Radiation 126 should be contained in a wavelength range that camera 104 is capable of detecting. Visible as well as IR wavelengths are suitable for this purpose. Camera 104 thus images all unobstructed space points Pi using its optics and optical sensor (shown and discussed in more detail below) to produce image 100′ of environment 100. Image 100′ is shown in detail on the enlarged view of screen 124 in the lower portion of
For the purposes of computing reduced homography H of the invention, we rely on images of space points Pi projected to correspondent image points pi. Since there are no occlusions or obstructions in the present example and phone 102 is held in a suitable pose, camera 104 sees all nine space points P1, . . . , P9 and images them to produce correspondent image points p1, . . . , p9 in image 100′.
All but imaged optical features corresponding to image points p1, . . . , p9 are left out of image 100′ for reasons of clarity. Note that the image is not shown inverted in this example. Of course, whether the image is or is not inverted will depend on the types of optics deployed by camera 104.
The projections of space points Pi to image points pi are parameterized in sensor coordinates (Xs,Ys). Each image point pi that is imaged by the optics of camera 104 onto sensor 130 is thus measured in sensor or image coordinates along the Xs and Ys axes. Image points pi are indicated with open circles (same as in
In practice, ideal image points pi are almost never observed. Instead, a number of measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i indicated by crosses are recorded on pixels 134 of sensor 130 at measured image coordinates {circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi. (In the convention commonly adopted in the art and also herein, the “hat” on any parameter or variable is used to indicate a measured value as opposed to an ideal value or a model value.) Each measured image point {circumflex over (p)}i is thus parameterized in image plane 128 as: {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) while ideal image point pi is at: pi=(xi,yi).
Sensor 130 records electromagnetic radiation 126 from space points Pi at various locations in image plane 128. A number of measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i are shown for each ideal image point pi to aid in visualizing the nature of the error. In fact,
With the exception of outliers 136, measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i are expected to lie within typical or normal error regions more or less centered about corresponding ideal image points pi. To illustrate,
The present invention targets situations as shown in
We now turn to
Returning to
For any particular measured image point {circumflex over (p)}9 corresponding to space point P9 that is recorded by sensor 130 at time t, one can state the following mapping relation:
A
T(t)P9→p9+δt→{circumflex over (p)}9(t). (Rel. 1)
Here AT(t) is the transpose of the homography matrix A(t) at time t, δt is the total error at time t, and {circumflex over (p)}9(t) is the measured image point {circumflex over (p)}9 captured at time t. It should be noted here that total error δt contains both a normal error defined by error region 138 and the larger error due to radial structural uncertainty 140. Of course, although applied specifically to image point p9, Rel. 1 holds for any other image point pi.
To gain a better appreciation of when structural uncertainty 140 is sufficiently large in practice to warrant application of a reduced homography H of the invention and some of its potential sources we turn to
An optic 148 belonging to camera 104 and defining viewpoint O is also explicitly shown in
Recall now, that recovering the pose of camera 104 traditionally involves finding the best estimate Θ for the collineation or homography A from the available measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i. Homography A is a matrix that encodes in it {R,
Note that viewpoint O is placed at the origin of camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc). In the unknown pose shown in
In comparing ideal points pi in projective plane 146 with actually measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i and their radial structural uncertainties 140 it is clear that any pose recovery that relies on the radial portion of measured data will be unreliable. In many practical situations, radial structural uncertainty 140 in measured image data is introduced by the on-board optical apparatus, which is embodied by camera 104. The structural uncertainty can be persistent (inherent) or transitory. Persistent uncertainty can be due to radial defects in lens 148 of camera 104. Such lens defects can be encountered in molded lenses or mirrors when the molding process is poor or in diamond turned lenses or mirrors when the turning parameters are incorrectly varied during the turning process. Transitory uncertainty can be due to ghosting effects produced by internal reflections or stray light scattering within lens 148 (particularly acute in a compound or multi-component lens) or due to otherwise insufficiently optimized lens 148. It should be noted that ghosting can be further exacerbated when space points Pi being imaged are all illuminated at high intensities (e.g., high brightness point sources, such as markers embodied by LEDs or IR LEDs).
Optical sensor 130 of camera 104 can also introduce radial structural uncertainty due to its design (intentional or unintentional), poor quality, thermal effects (non-uniform heating), motion blur and motion artifacts created by a rolling shutter, pixel bleed-through and other influences that will be apparent to those skilled in the art. These effects can be particularly acute when sensor 130 is embodied by a poor quality CMOS sensor or a position sensing device (PSD) with hard to determine radial characteristics. Still other cases may include a sensor such as a 1-D PSD shaped into a circular ring to only measure the azimuthal distances between features in angular units (e.g., radians or degrees). Once again, these effects can be persistent or transitory. Furthermore, the uncertainties introduced by lens 148 and sensor 130 can add to produce a joint uncertainty that is large and difficult to characterize, even if the individual contributions are modest.
The challenge is to provide the best estimate Θ of homography A from measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) despite radial structural uncertainties 140. According to the invention, adopting a reduced representation of measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) and deploying a correspondingly reduced homography H meets this challenge. The measured data is then used to obtain an estimation matrix Θ of the reduced homography H rather than an estimate Θ of the regular homography A. To better understand reduced homography H and its matrix, it is important to first review 3D rotations in detail. We begin with rotation matrices that compose the full or complete rotation matrix R, which expresses the orientation of camera 104. Orientation is expressed in reference to world coordinates (Xw,Yw,Zw) with the aid of camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc).
In the pre-rotated state, the axes of camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc) parameterizing the moving reference frame of phone 202 are triple primed (Xc′″,Yc′″,Zc′″) to better keep track of camera coordinate axes after each of the three rotations. In addition, pre-rotated axes (Xc′″,Yc′″,Zc′″) of camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc) are aligned with axes Xw, Yw and Zw of world coordinates (Xs,Ys,Zs) that parameterize the environment. However, pre-rotated axes (Xc′″,Yc′″,Zc′″) are displaced from the origin of world coordinates (Xs,Ys,Zs) by offset
The first rotation by angle αc is executed by rotating joint 211 and thus turning hoop 210, as shown in
After each of the three rotations is completed, camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc) are progressively unprimed to denote how many rotations have already been executed. Thus, after this first rotation by angle αc, the axes of camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc) are unprimed once and designated (Xc″,Yc″,Zc″) as indicated in
The result of the third and last rotation by angle γc is shown in
This final rotation yields the fully rotated and now unprimed camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc). In this example angle γc is chosen to be 40°, representing a rotation by 40° in the counter-clockwise direction. Note that in order to return fully rotated camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc) into initial alignment with world coordinates (Xw,Yw,Zw) the rotations by angles αc, βc and γc need to be taken in exactly the reverse order (this is due to the order-dependence or non-commuting nature of rotations in 3D space).
It should be understood that mechanism 206 was employed for illustrative purposes to show how any 3D orientation of phone 202 consists of three rotational degrees of freedom. These non-commuting rotations are described or parameterized by rotation angles αc, βc and γc around camera axes Zc′″, Xc″ and finally Yc′. What is important is that this 3D rotation convention employing angles αc, βc, γc is capable of describing any possible orientation that phone 202 may assume in any 3D environment.
We now turn back to
Each one of the three rotations described by the rotation angles αc, βc, γc has an associated rotation matrix, namely: R(α), R(β) and R(γ). A number of conventions for the order of the individual rotations, other than the order shown in
The full or complete rotation matrix R is a composition of individual rotation matrices R(α), R(β), R(γ) that account for all three rotations (αc,βc,γc) previously introduced in
The complete rotation matrix R is obtained by multiplying the above individual rotation matrices in the order of the chosen rotation convention. For the rotations performed in the order shown in
It should be noted that rotation matrices are always square and have real-valued elements. Algebraically, a rotation matrix in 3-dimensions is a 3×3 special orthogonal matrix (SO(3)) whose determinant is 1 and whose transpose is equal to its inverse:
R
T
=R
−1
;Det(R)=1, Eq. 3
where superscript “T” indicates the transpose, superscript “−1” indicates the inverse and “Det” designates the determinant.
For reasons that will become apparent later, in pose recovery with reduced homography H according to the invention we will use rotations defined by the Euler rotation convention. The convention illustrating the rotation of the body or camera 104 as seen by an observer in world coordinates is shown in
In pose recovery we are describing what camera 104 sees as a result of the rotations. We are thus not interested in the rotations of camera 104, but rather the transformation of coordinates that camera 104 experiences due to the rotations. As is well known, the rotation matrix R that describes the coordinate transformation corresponds to the transpose of the composition of rotation matrices introduced above (Eq. 2A-C). From now on, when we refer to the rotation matrix R we will thus be referring to the rotation matrix that describes the coordinate transformation experienced by camera 104. (It is important to recall here, that the transpose of a composition or product of matrices A and B inverts the order of that composition, such that (AB)T=BTAT.)
In accordance with the Euler composition we will use, the first rotation angle designated by ψ is the same as angle α defined above. Thus, the first rotation matrix R(ψ) in the Euler convention is:
The second rotation by angle θ produces rotation matrix R(θ):
Now, the third rotation by angle ψ corresponds to rotation matrix R(ψ) and is described by:
The result is that in the Euler convention using Euler rotation angles φ,θ,ψ we obtain a complete rotation matrix R=R(φ)·R(θ)·R(ψ). Note the ordering of rotation matrices to ensure that angles φ,θ,ψ are applied in that order. (Note that in some textbooks the definition of rotation angles φ and ψ is sometimes reversed.)
Having defined the complete rotation matrix R in the Euler convention, we turn to
Before applying the reduced representation to measured image points p, we note that any point (a,b) in projective plane 146 is represented in normalized homogeneous coordinates by applying the normalization operator N to the triple (a,b,f), where f is the focal length of lens 148. Similarly, a line Ax+By +C=O, sometimes also represented as [A,B,C] (square brackets are often used to differentiate points from lines), is expressed in normalized homogeneous coordinates by applying normalization operator N to the triple [A,B,C/f]. The resulting point and line representations are insensitive to sign, i.e., they can be taken with a positive or negative sign.
We further note, that a collineation is a one-to-one mapping from the set of image points p′i seen by camera 104 in an unknown pose to the set of image points pi as seen by camera 104 in the canonical pose shown in
i
=±N[A
T
i
];
i
=±N[A
−1
i]. (Eq. 4)
In Eq. 4
Eq. 4 states that these homogenous representations are obtained by applying the transposed collineation AT to image point pi represented by
Returning to the challenge posed by structural uncertainties 140, we now consider
Now, in departure from the standard approach, we take the ideal reduced representation r′i of point p′i o be a ray in projective plane 146 passing through pi′ and the origin o′ of plane 146. Effectively, reducing the representation of image point pi′ to just ray r′i passing through it and origin o′ eliminates all radial but not azimuthal (polar) information contained in point pi′. The deliberate removal of radial information from ray r′i is undertaken because the radial information of a measurement is highly unreliable. This is confirmed by the radial structural uncertainty 140 in measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i that under ideal conditions (without noise or structural uncertainty 140) would project to ideal image point {circumflex over (p)}i′ in the unknown pose we are trying to recover.
Indeed, it is a very surprising finding of the present invention, that in reducing the representation of measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i by discarding their radial information and representing them with rays {circumflex over (r)}i (note the “hat”, since the rays are the reduced representations of measured rather than model or ideal points) the resultant reduced homography H nonetheless supports the recovery of all extrinsic parameters (full pose) of camera 104. In
Due to well-known duality between lines and points in projective geometry (each line has a dual point and vice versa; also known as pole and polar or as “perps” in universal hyperbolic geometry) any homogeneous representation can be translated into its mathematically dual representation. In fact, a person skilled in the art will appreciate that the below approach developed to teach a person skilled in the art about the practice of reduced homography H can be recast into mathematically equivalent formulations by making various choices permitted by this duality.
In order to simplify the representation of ideal and measured rays r′i, {circumflex over (r)}i for reduced homography H, we invoke the rules of duality to represent them by their duals or poles. Thus, reduced representation of point {circumflex over (p)}i′ by ray r′i can be translated to its pole by constructing the join between origin o′ and point {circumflex over (p)}i′. (The join is closely related to the vector cross product of standard Euclidean geometry.) A pole or n-vector
Notice that the pole of any line through origin o′ will not intersect projective plane 146 and will instead represent a “point at infinity”. This means that in the present embodiment where all reduced representations r′i pass through origin o′ we expect all n-vectors
i
′=±N(ô×
where the normalization operator N is deployed again to ensure that n-vector
In the ideal or model case, reduced homography H acts on vector
In practice we do not know ideal image points pi′ nor their rays r′i. Instead, we only know measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i and their reduced representations as rays {circumflex over (r)}i. This means that our task is to find an estimation matrix Θ for reduced homography H based entirely on measured values {circumflex over (p)}i in the unknown pose and on known vectors representing the known points Pi in canonical pose (the latter also sometimes being referred to as ground truth). As an additional aid, we have the condition that the motion of smart phone 102 and thus of its on-board camera 104 is substantially bound to reference plane 118 and is therefore confined to volume 120, as illustrated in
We now refer to
From the prior art teachings it is known that a motion of camera 104 defined by a succession of sets {R,
where I is the 3×3 identity matrix and
To recover the unknown pose of smart phone 102 at time t=t1 we need to find the matrix that sends the known points Pi as seen by camera 104 in canonical pose (shown at time t=to) to points pi′ as seen by camera 104 in the unknown pose. In the prior art, that matrix is the transpose, AT, of homography A. The matrix that maps points pi′ from the unknown pose back to canonical pose is the transpose of the inverse A−1 of homography A. Based on the definition that any homography matrix multiplied by its inverse has to yield the identity matrix I, we find from Eq. 6 that A−1 is expressed as:
Before taking into account rotations, let's examine the behavior of homography A in a simple and ideal model case. Take parallel translation of camera 104 in plane 118 at offset distance d to world coordinate origin while keeping phone 102 such that optical axis OA remains perpendicular to plane 118 (no rotation—i.e., full rotation matrix R is expressed by the 3×3 identity matrix I). We thus have
When z is allowed to vary slightly, i.e., between εf and εb or within volume 120 about reference plane 118 as previously defined (see
The inverse homography A−1 for either one of these simple cases can be computed by using Eq. 7.
Now, when rotation of camera 104 is added, the prior art approach produces homography A that contains the full rotation matrix R and displacement
In the canonical pose at time t=to an enlarged view of display screen 124 showing image 100′ captured by camera 104 of smart phone 102 contains image 150′ of wall 150. In this pose, wall image 150′ shows no perspective distortion. It is a rectangle with its conjugate vanishing points v1, v2 (not shown) both at infinity. The unit vectors {circumflex over (n)}v1, {circumflex over (n)}v2 pointing to these conjugate vanishing points are shown with their designations in the further enlarged inset labeled CPV (Canonical Pose View). Unit surface normal {circumflex over (n)}p, which is obtained from the cross-product of vectors {circumflex over (n)}v1,{circumflex over (n)}v2 points into the page in inset CPV. In the real three-dimensional space of environment 100, this corresponds to pointing from viewpoint O straight at the origin of world coordinates (Xw,Yw,Zw) along optical axis OA. Of course, {circumflex over (n)}p is also the normal to wall 150 based on our parameterization and definitions.
In the unknown pose at time t=t1 another enlarged view of display screen 124 shows image 100′. This time image 150′ of wall 150 is distorted by the perspective of camera 104. Now conjugate vanishing points v1, v2 associated with the quadrilateral of wall image 150′ are no longer at infinity, but at the locations shown. Of course, vanishing points v1, v2 are not real points but are defined by mathematical construction, as shown by the long-dashed lines. The unit vectors {circumflex over (n)}v1, {circumflex over (n)}v2 pointing to conjugate vanishing points v1, v2 are shown in the further enlarged inset labeled UPV (Unknown Pose View). Unit surface normal {circumflex over (n)}p, again obtained from the cross-product of vectors {circumflex over (n)}v1, {circumflex over (n)}v2, no longer points into the page in inset UVP. In the real three-dimensional space of environment 100, {circumflex over (n)}p still points from viewpoint O at the origin of world coordinates (Xw,Yw,Zw), but this is no longer a direction along optical axis OA of camera 104 due to the unknown rotation of phone 102.
The traditional homography A will recover the unknown rotation in terms of rotation matrix R composed of vectors {circumflex over (n)}v1, {circumflex over (n)}v2, {circumflex over (n)}p in their transposed form {circumflex over (n)}v1T, {circumflex over (n)}v2T, {circumflex over (n)}pT. In fact, the transposed vectors {circumflex over (n)}v1T, {circumflex over (n)}v2T, {circumflex over (n)}pT simply form the column space of rotation matrix R. Of course, the complete traditional homography A also contains displacement
In accordance with the invention, we start with traditional homography A that includes rotation matrix R and reduce it to homography H by using the fact that the z-component of normalized n-vector
where the components of vector
i
′=κA
T
i′, (Eq. 9)
Note that the transpose of A, or AT, is applied here because of the “passive” convention as defined by Eq. 4. In other words, when camera 104 motion is described by matrix A, what happens to the features in the environment from the camera's point of view is just the opposite. Hence, the transpose of A is used to describe what the camera is seeing as a result of its motion.
Now, in the reduced representation chosen according to the invention, the z-component of n-vector
R
r
T
=R
r
T(ψ)·RrT(θ)·RT(φ). (Eq. 10A)
Expanded to its full form, this transposed rotation matrix RrT is:
and it multiplies out to:
Using trigonometric identities on entries with multiplication of three rotation angles in the transpose of the modified rotation matrix RrT we convert expressions involving sums and differences of rotation angles in the upper left 2×2 sub-matrix of RrT into a 2×2 sub-matrix C as follows:
It should be noted that sub-matrix C can be decomposed into a 2×2 improper rotation (reflection along y, followed by rotation) and a proper 2×2 rotation.
Using sub-matrix C from Eq. 11, we can now rewrite Eq. 9 as follows:
At this point we remark again, that because of the reduced representation of the invention the z-component of n-vector
where the newly introduced column vector
Thus we have now derived a reduced homography H, or rather its transpose HT=[C,
We now deploy our reduced representation as the basis for performing actual pose recovery. In this process, the transpose of reduced homography HT has to be estimated with a 2×3 estimation matrix Θ from measured points {circumflex over (p)}i. Specifically, we set Θ to match sub-matrix C and two-dimensional column vector
Note that the thetas used in Eq. 14 are not angles, but rather the estimation values of the reduced homography.
When Θ is estimated, we need to extract the values for the in-plane displacements δx/d and δy/d. Meanwhile δz, rather than being zero when strictly constrained to reference plane 118, is allowed to vary between −εf and +εb. From Eq. 14 we find that under these conditions displacements δx/d, δy/d are given by:
Note that δz should be kept small (i.e., (d'δz)/d should be close to one) to ensure that this approach yields good results.
Now we are in a position to put everything into our reduced representation framework. For any given space point Pi, its ideal image point pi in canonical pose is represented by
The primed values in the unknown pose, i.e., point pi′ expressed by its xi′ and yi′ values recorded on sensor 130, can be restated in terms of estimation values θ1, . . . , θ6 and canonical point pi known by its xi and yi values. This is accomplished by referring back to Eq. 14 to see that:
x′
i=θ1xi+θ2yi+θ3, and
y′
i=θ4xi+θ5yi+θ6.
In this process, we have scaled the homogeneous representation of space points Pi by offset d through multiplication by 1/d. In other words, the corresponding m-vector
With our reduced homography framework in place, we turn our attention from ideal or model values ({circumflex over (p)}i′=({circumflex over (x)}i′,ŷi′)) to the actual measured values {circumflex over (x)}i and ŷi that describe the location of measured points {circumflex over (p)}i ({circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi)) produced by the projection of space points Pi onto sensor 130. Instead of looking at measured values {circumflex over (x)}i and ŷi in image plane 128 where sensor 130 is positioned, however, we will look at them in projective plane 146 for reasons of clarity and ease of explanation.
Since rays {circumflex over (r)}i1, {circumflex over (r)}i2, {circumflex over (r)}i3 remove all radial information on where along their extent measured points {circumflex over (p)}i1, {circumflex over (p)}i2, {circumflex over (p)}i3 are located, we can introduce a useful computational simplification. Namely, we take measured points {circumflex over (p)}i1, {circumflex over (p)}i2, {circumflex over (p)}i3 to lie where their respective rays {circumflex over (r)}i1, {circumflex over (r)}i2, {circumflex over (r)}i3 intersect a unit circle UC that is centered on origin o′ of projective plane 146. By definition, a radius rc of unit circle UC is equal to 1.
Under the simplification the sum of squares for each pair of coordinates of points {circumflex over (p)}i1, {circumflex over (p)}i2, {circumflex over (p)}i3, i.e., ({circumflex over (x)}i1,ŷi1), ({circumflex over (x)}i2,ŷi2), ({circumflex over (x)}i3,ŷi3), has to equal 1. Differently put, we have artificially required that {circumflex over (x)}i2+ŷi2=1 for all measured points. Furthermore, we can use Eq. 5 to compute the corresponding n-vector translations for each measured point as follows:
Under the simplification, the translation of each ray {circumflex over (r)}i1, {circumflex over (r)}i2, {circumflex over (r)}i3 into its corresponding n-vector {circumflex over (n)}i1, {circumflex over (n)}i2, {circumflex over (n)}i3 ensures that the latter is normalized. Since the n-vectors do not reside in projective plane 146 (see
Now, space point Pi represented by vector
Of course, camera 104 does not measure ideal data while phone 102 is held in the unknown pose. Instead, we get three measured points {circumflex over (p)}i1, {circumflex over (p)}i2, {circumflex over (p)}i3, their rays {circumflex over (r)}i1, {circumflex over (r)}i2, {circumflex over (r)}i3 and the normalized n-vectors representing these rays, namely {circumflex over (n)}i1, {circumflex over (n)}i2, {circumflex over (n)}i3. We want to obtain an estimate of transposed reduced homography HT in the form of estimation matrix Θ that best explains n-vectors {circumflex over (n)}i1, {circumflex over (n)}i2, {circumflex over (n)}i3 we have derived from measured points {circumflex over (p)}i1, {circumflex over (p)}i2, {circumflex over (p)}i3 to ground truth expressed for that space point Pi by vector
We start by noting that the mapped ground truth vector
h
i
2+(
Substituting with the actual x and y components of the vectors in Eq. 18, collecting terms and solving for hi2, we obtain:
h
i
2=(yi′)2+(xi′)2−(yi′)2(ŷi)2−(xi′)2({circumflex over (x)}i)2−2(xi′yi′)({circumflex over (x)}iŷi) (Eq. 19)
Since we have three measurements, we will have three such equations, one for each disparity hi1, hi2, hi3.
We can aggregate the disparity from the three measured points we have, or indeed from any number of measured points, by taking the sum of all disparities squared. In the present case, the approach produces the following performance criterion and associated optimization problem:
Note that the condition of the determinant of the square symmetric matrix ΘΘT is required to select one member out of the infinite family of possible solutions. To recall, any homography is always valid up to a scale. In other words, other than the scale factor, the homography remains the same for any magnification (de-magnification) of the image or the stationary objects in the environment.
In a first step, we expand Eq. 19 over all estimation values θ1, . . . , θ6 of our estimation matrix Θ. To do this, we first construct vectors
Now we notice that all the squared terms in Eq. 19 can be factored and substituted using our computational simplification in which {circumflex over (x)}i2+ŷi2=1 for all measured points. To apply the simplification, we first factor the square terms as follows:
(yi′)2+(xi′)2−(yi′)2(ŷi)2−(xi′)2({circumflex over (x)}i)2=(xi′)2(1−{circumflex over (x)}i2)+(yi′)2(1−ŷi2)
We now substitute (1−{circumflex over (x)}i2)=ŷi2 and (1−ŷi2)={circumflex over (x)}i2 from the condition {circumflex over (x)}i2+ŷi2=1 and rewrite entire Eq. 19 as:
h
i
2=(xi′)2(ŷi)2+(yi′)2({circumflex over (x)}i)2−2(xi′yi′)({circumflex over (x)}iŷi)
From elementary algebra we see that in this form the above is just the square of a difference. Namely, the right hand side is really (a−b)2=a2−2ab+b2 in which a=(xi′)2(ŷi)2 and b=(yi′)2({circumflex over (x)}i)2. We can express this square of a difference in matrix form to obtain:
Returning now to our purpose of expanding over vectors
Now we have a 2×6 matrix acting on our 6-dimensional column vector
Vector [xi,yi,1] in its row or column form represents corresponding space point Pi in canonical pose and scaled coordinates. In other words, it is the homogeneous representation of space points Pi scaled by offset distance d through multiplication by 1/d.
By using the row and column versions of the vector
where the transpose of the vector is taken to place it in its row form. Additionally, the off-diagonal zeroes now represent 3-dimensional zero row vectors (0,0,0), since the matrix is still 2×6.
From Eq. 22B we can express [yi′,{circumflex over (x)}i,xi′,ŷi]T as follows:
Based on the matrix expression of vector [xi′,ŷi,yi′,{circumflex over (x)}i]T of Eq. 22B we can now rewrite Eq. 21, which is the square of the difference of these two vector entries in matrix form expanded over the 6-dimensions of our vector of estimation values
It is important to note that the first matrix is 6×2 while the second is 2×6 (recall from linear algebra that matrices that are n by m and j by k can be multiplied, as long as m=j).
Multiplication of the two matrices in Eq. 23 thus yields a 6×6 matrix that we shall call M. The M matrix is multiplied on the left by row vector
Furthermore, the 6×6 M matrix obtained in Eq. 23 has several useful properties that can be immediately deduced from the rules of linear algebra. The first has to do with the fact that it involves compositions of 3-dimensional m-vectors in column form
In fact, the 6×6 M matrix has four 3×3 blocks that include this useful composition, as is confirmed by performing the matrix multiplication in Eq. 23 to obtain the 6×6 M matrix in its explicit form:
The congenial properties of the
S
02
T
=S
02
;S
20
T
=S
20
;S
11
T=S11;MT=M.
These properties guarantee that the M matrix is positive definite, symmetrical and that its eigenvalues are real and positive.
Of course, the M matrix only corresponds to a single measurement. Meanwhile, we will typically accumulate many measurements for each space point Pi. In addition, the same homography applies to all space points Pi in any given unknown pose. Hence, what we really need is a sum of M matrices. The sum has to include measurements {circumflex over (p)}ij=({circumflex over (x)}ij,ŷij) for each space point Pi and all of its measurements further indexed by j. The sum of all M matrices thus produced is called the Σ-matrix and is expressed as:
Σ=Σi,jM.
The Σ-matrix should not be confused with the summation sign used to sum all of the M matrices.
Now we are in a position to revise the optimization problem originally posed in Eq. 20 using the Σ-matrix we just introduced above to obtain:
Note that the prescribed optimization requires that the minimum of the Σ-matrix be found by varying estimation values θ1, θ2, θ3, θ4, θ5, θ6 succinctly expressed by vector
There are a number of ways to solve the optimization posed by Eq. 24. A convenient procedure that we choose herein involves well-known Lagrange multipliers method that provides a strategy for finding the local minimum (or maximum) of a function subject to an equality constraint. In our case, the equality constraint is placed on the norm of vector
To obtain the solution we introduce the Lagrange multiplier λ as an additional parameter and translate Eq. 24 into a Lagrangian under the above constraint as follows:
To find the minimum we need to take the derivative of the Lagrangian of Eq. 25 with respect to our parameters of interest, namely those expressed in vector
The stationary point or the minimum that we are looking for occurs when the derivative of the Lagrangian with respect to
(Notice the convenient disappearance of the ½ factor in Eq. 26.) We immediately recognize that Eq. 26 is a characteristic equation that admits of solutions by an eigenvector of the Σ matrix with the eigenvalue λ. In other words, we just have to solve the eigenvalue equation:
Σ
where
The eigenvector
We now turn to
Item 102 equipped with on-board optical apparatus 104 is the smart phone with the CMOS camera already introduced above. For reference, viewpoint O of camera 104 in the canonical pose at time t=to is shown. Recall that in the canonical pose camera 104 is aligned such that camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc) are oriented the same way as world coordinates (Xw,Yw,Zw). In other words, in the canonical pose camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc) are aligned with world coordinates (Xw,Yw,Zw) and thus the rotation matrix R is the identity matrix I.
The condition that the motion of camera 104 be essentially confined to a reference plane holds as well. Instead of showing the reference plane explicitly in
In an unknown pose at time t=t2, the total displacement between viewpoint O and the origin of world coordinates (Xw,Yw,Zw) is equal to
In the present embodiment, the condition on the motion of smart phone 102, and thus on camera 104, can be enforced from knowledge that allows us to place bounds on that motion. In the present case, the knowledge is that smart phone 102 is operated by a human. A hand 306 of that human is shown holding smart phone 102 in the unknown pose at time t=t2.
In a typical usage case, the human user will stay seated a certain distance from screen 304 for reasons of comfort and ease of operation. For example, the human may be reclined in a chair or standing at a comfortable viewing distance from screen 304. In that condition, a gesture or a motion 308 of his or her hand 306 along the z-direction (in world coordinates) is necessarily limited. Knowledge of the human anatomy allows us to place the corresponding bound on motion 308 in z. This is tantamount to bounding the variation in offset distance d from the Xw-Yw plane or to knowing that the z-distance between viewpoint O and the Xw-Yw plane, as required for setting our condition on the motion of camera 104. If desired, the possible forward and back movements that human hand 306 is likely to execute, i.e., the values of d−εf and d+εb, can be determined by human user interface specialists. Such accurate knowledge ensures that the condition on the motion of camera 104 consonant with the reduced homography H that we are practicing is met.
Alternatively, the condition can be enforced by a mechanism that physically constrains motion 308. For example, a pane of glass 310 serving as that mechanism may be placed at distance d from screen 304. It is duly noted that this condition is frequently found in shopping malls and at storefronts. Other mechanisms are also suitable, especially when the optical apparatus is not being manipulated by a human user, but instead by a robot or machine with intrinsic mechanical constraints on its motion.
In the present embodiment non-collinear optical features that are used for pose recovery by camera 104 are space points P20 through P27 belonging to television 302. Space points P20 through P24 belong to display screen 304. They correspond to its corners and to a designated pixel. Space points P25 through P27 are high contrast features of television 302 including its markings and a corner. Knowledge of these optical features can be obtained by direct measurement prior to implementing the reduced homography H of the invention or they may be obtained from the specifications supplied by the manufacturer of television 302. Optionally, separate or additional optical features, such as point sources (e.g., LEDs or even IR LEDs) can be provided at suitable locations on television 302 (e.g., around screen 304).
During operation, the best fit of measured data to unknown pose at time t=t2 is determined by the optimization method of the previous section, or by another optimization approach. The eigenvector
First, in unknown pose at t=t2 we apply the optimization procedure introduced in the prior section. The eigenvector
We can now use this estimation matrix Θ to explicitly recover a number of useful pose parameters, as well as other parameters that are related to the pose of camera 104. Note that it will not always be necessary to extract all pose parameters and the scaling factor κ to obtain the desired information.
Frequently, the most important pose information of camera 104 relates to a pointer 312 on screen 304. Specifically, it is very convenient in many applications to draw pointer 312 at the location where the optical axis OA of camera 104 intersects screen 304, or, equivalently, the Xw-Yw plane of world coordinates (Xw,Yw,Zw). Of course, optical axis OA remains collinear with Zc-axis of camera coordinates as defined in the present convention irrespective of pose assumed by camera 104 (see, e.g.,
Referring now to
In the canonical pose, as indicated above, camera Zc-axis is aligned with world Zw-axis and points at screen origin Os. In this pose, the location of pointer 312 in screen coordinates is just (0,0) (at the origin), as indicated. Viewpoint O is also at the prescribed offset distance d from screen origin Os.
Unknown rotation and translation, e.g., a hand gesture, executed by the human user places smart phone 102, and more precisely its camera 104 into the unknown pose at time t=t2, in which viewpoint O is designated with a prime, i.e., O′. The camera coordinates that visualize the orientation of camera 104 in the unknown pose are also denoted with primes, namely (Xc′,Yc′,Zc′). (Note that we use the prime notation to stay consistent with the theoretical sections in which ideal parameters in the unknown pose were primed and were thus distinguished from the measured ones that bear a “hat” and the canonical ones that bear no marking.)
In the unknown pose, optical axis OA extending along rotated camera axis Zc′ intersects screen 304 at unknown location (xs,ys) in screen coordinates, as indicated in
The second Euler rotation angle, namely tilt θ, is visualized explicitly in
According to the present teachings, transposed and reduced homography HT recovered in the form of estimation matrix Θ contains all the necessary information to recover the position (xs,ys) of pointer 312 on screen 304 in the unknown pose of camera 104. In terms of the reduced homography, we know that its application to vector
s′=κ(C
Written explicitly with vectors we care about, Eq. 13′ becomes:
At this point we see a great advantage of the reduced representation of the invention. Namely, the z-component of vector
Because the map is to ideal vector (0,0,d) we know that this mapping from the point of view of camera 104 is a scale-invariant property. Thus, in the case of recovery of pointer 312 we can drop scale factor κ. Now, solving for pointer 312 on screen 304, we obtain the simple equation:
To solve this linear equation for our two-dimensional vector (xs,ys) we subtract vector d
To get the actual numerical answer, we need to substitute for the entries of matrix C and vector
Persons skilled in the art will recognize that this is a very desirable manner of recovering pointer 312, because it can be implemented without having to perform any extraneous computations such as determining scale factor κ.
Of course, in many applications the position of pointer 312 on screen 304 is not all the information that is desired. To illustrate how the rotation angles φ,θ,ψ are recovered, we turn to the isometric diagram of
Before recovering the rotation angles to which camera 104 was subject by the user in moving from the canonical to the unknown pose, let us first examine sub-matrix C and vector
We start with 2×2 sub-matrix C. The matrices whose composition led to sub-matrix C and vector
Note that these entries are exactly the same as those in the upper left 2×2 block matrix of reduced rotation matrix RrT. In fact, sub-matrix C is produced by the composition of upper left 2×2 block matrices of the composition RT(ψ)RT(θ)RT(φ) that makes up our reduced rotation matrix RrT (see Eq. 10A). Hence, sub-matrix C can also be rewritten as the composition of these 2×2 block matrices as follows:
By applying the rule of linear algebra that the determinant of a composition is equal to the product of determinants of the component matrices we find that the determinant of sub-matrix C is:
Clearly, the reduced rotation representation of the present invention resulting in sub-matrix C no longer obeys the rule for rotation matrices that their determinant be equal to one (see Eq. 3). The rule that the transpose be equal to the inverse is also not true for sub-matrix C (see also Eq. 3). However, the useful conclusion from this examination is that the determinant of sub-matrix C is equal to cos θ, which is the cosine of rotation angle θ and in terms of the best estimates from computed estimation matrix Θ this is equal to:
cos θ=θ1θ5−θ2θ4. (Eq. 32)
Because of the ambiguity in sign and in scaling, Eq. 32 is not by itself sufficient to recover angle θ. However, we can use it as one of the equations from which some aspects of pose can be recovered. We should bear in mind as well, however, that our estimation matrix was computed under the constraint that ∥
In turning back to
Now, rotation angle θ is seen to be the cone angle of a cone 314. Geometrically, cone 314 represents the set of all possible unknown poses in which a vector from viewpoint O′ goes to pointer location (xs,ys) on screen 304. Because of the condition imposed by offset distance d, only vectors on cone 314 that start on a section parallel to screen 304 at offset d are possible solutions. That section is represented by circle 316. Thus, viewpoint O′ at any location on circle 316 can produce line OA that goes from viewpoint O′ in unknown pose to pointer 312 on screen 304. The cosine cos θ of rotation angle θ is related to the radius of circle 316. Specifically, the radius of circle 316 is just d|tan θ| as indicated in
To recover rotation angles φ,θ,ψ we need to revert back to the mathematics. Specifically, we need to finish our analysis of sub-matrix C we review its form after the trigonometric substitutions using sums and differences of rotation angles φ and ψ (see Eq. 11). In this form we see that sub-matrix C represents an improper rotation and a reflection as follows:
The first term in Eq. 33 represents an improper rotation (reflection along y followed by rotation) and the second term is a proper rotation.
Turning now to vector
Note that under the condition that the motion of camera 104 be confined to offset distance d from screen 304, δz is zero, and hence Eq. 34 reduces to:
Also note, that with no displacement at all, i.e., when δx and δy are zero, vector
We first note that the determinant Det∥ΘΘT∥ we initially invoked in our optimization condition in the theory section can be directly computed. Specifically, we obtain for the product of the estimation matrices:
From the equation for pointer recovery (Eq. 29A), we can substitute for
Now we write ΘΘT just in terms of quantities we know, by substituting
We now compute the determinant of Eq. 37 (substituting cos θ for the determinant of C) to yield:
We should bear in mind, however, that our estimation matrix was computed under the constraint that ∥
There are several other useful combinations of estimation parameters θi that will be helpful in recovering the rotation angles. All of these can be computed directly from equations presented above with the use of trigonometric identities. We will now list them as properties for later use:
We also define a parameter ρ as follows:
The above equations and properties allow us to finally recover all pose parameters of camera 104 as follows:
Sum of rotation angles φ and ψ (sometimes referred to as yaw and roll) is obtained directly from Prop. VI and is invariant to the scale of Θ and valid for 1+cos θ>0:
The cosine of θ, cos θ, is recovered using Prop. VII:
=ρ/2√{square root over ((ρ/2)2−1)},
where the non-physical solution is discarded. Notice that this quantity is also scale-invariant.
The scale factor κ is recovered from Prop. V as:
Finally, rotation angles φ and ψ are recovered from Prop. I and Prop. II, with the additional use of trigonometric double-angle formulas:
We have thus recovered all the pose parameters of camera 104 despite the deployment of reduced homography H.
The reduced homography H according to the invention can be practiced with optical apparatus that uses various optical sensors. However, the particulars of the approach make the use of some types of optical sensors preferred. Specifically, when structural uncertainty is substantially radial, such as structural uncertainty 140 discussed in the above example embodiment, it is convenient to deploy as optical sensor 130 a device that is capable of collecting azimuthal information a about measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi).
For clarity, the same pattern of measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i as in
PSD 130′ records measured data directly in polar coordinates. In these coordinates r corresponds to the radius away from camera center CC and a corresponds to an azimuthal angle (sometimes called the polar angle) measured from sensor axis Ys in the counter-clockwise direction. The polar parameterization is also shown explicitly for a measured point {circumflex over (p)}=(â,{circumflex over (r)}) so that the reader can appreciate that to convert between the Cartesian convention and polar convention of PSD 130′ we use the fact that x=−r sin a and y=r cos a.
The actual readout of signals corresponding to measured points {circumflex over (p)} is performed with the aid of anodes 320A, 320B. Furthermore, signals in regions 322 and 324 do not fall on the active portion of PSD 130′ and are thus not recorded. A person skilled in the art will appreciate that the readout conventions will differ between PSDs and are thus referred to the documentation for any particular PSD type and design.
The fact that measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) are reported by PSD 130′ already in polar coordinates as {circumflex over (p)}i=(rc,âi) is very advantageous. Recall that in the process of deriving estimation matrix Θ we introduced the mathematical convenience that {circumflex over (x)}i2+ŷi2=1 for all measured points {circumflex over (p)}. In polar coordinates, this condition is ensured by setting the radial information r for any measured point {circumflex over (p)} equal to one. In fact, we can set radiation information r to any constant rc. From
Since radial information r is not actually used, we are free to further narrow the type of PSD 130′ from one providing both azimuthal and radial information to just a one-dimensional PSD that provides only azimuthal information a. A suitable azimuthal sensor is available from Hamamatsu Photonics K. K., Solid State Division under model 58158. For additional useful teachings regarding the use of PSDs the reader is referred to U.S. Pat. No. 7,729,515 to Mandella et al.
Reduced homography H can also be applied when the structural uncertainty is linear, rather than radial. To understand how to apply reduced homography H and what condition on motion is consonant with the reduced representation in cases of linear structural uncertainty we turn to
Environment 400 is a real, three-dimensional indoor space enclosed by walls 406, a floor 408 and a ceiling 410. World coordinates (Xw,Yw,Zw) that parameterize environment 400 are right handed and their Yw-Zw plane is coplanar with ceiling 410. At the time shown in
Environment 400 offers a number of space points P30 through P34 representing optical features of objects that are not shown. As in the above embodiments, optical apparatus 402 images space points P30 through P34 onto its photo sensor 412 (see
Robot 404 has wheels 414 on which it moves along some trajectory 416 on floor 408. Due to this condition on robot 404, the motion of optical apparatus 402 is mechanically constrained to a constant offset distance dx from ceiling 410. In other words, in the present embodiment the condition on the motion of optical apparatus 402 is enforced by the very mechanism on which the latter is mounted, i.e., robot 404. Of course, the actual gap between floor 408 and ceiling 410 may not be the same everywhere in environment 400. As we have learned above, as long as this gap does not vary more than by a small deviation ε, the use of reduced homography H in accordance with the invention will yield good results.
In this embodiment, structural uncertainty is introduced by on-board optical apparatus 402 and it is substantially linear. To see this, we turn to the three-dimensional perspective view of
An enlarged view of the pattern as seen by optical apparatus 402 under its linear structural uncertainty condition is shown in projective plane 146. Due to the structural uncertainty, optical apparatus 402 only knows that radiation 126 from space points P30 through P34 could come from any place in correspondent virtual sheets VSP30 through VSP34 that contain space points P30 through P34 and intersect at viewpoint O. Virtual sheets VSP30 through VSP34 intersect projective plane 146 along vertical lines 140′. Lines 140′ represent the vertical linear uncertainty.
It is crucial to note that virtual sheets VSP30 through VSP34 are useful for visualization purposes only to explain what optical apparatus 402 is capable of seeing. No correspondent real entities exist in environment 400. It is optical apparatus 402 itself that introduces structural uncertainty 140′ that is visualized here with the aid of virtual sheets VSP30 through VSP34 intersecting with projective plane 146—no corresponding uncertainty exist in environment 400.
Now, as seen by looking at radiation 126 from point P33 in particular, structural uncertainty 140′ causes the information as to where radiation 126 originates from within virtual sheet SP33 to be lost to optical apparatus 402. As shown by arrow DP33, the information loss is such that space point P33 could move within sheet SP33 without registering any difference by optical apparatus 402.
As in the previous embodiment, viewpoint O is at the origin of camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc) and the Zc-axis is aligned with optical axis OA. Optical sensor 412 resides in the image plane defined by lens 418.
Optical apparatus 402 is kept in the unknown pose illustrated in
The sources of linear structural uncertainty 140′ in optical apparatus 402 can be intentional or unintended. As in the case of radial structural uncertainty 140, linear structural uncertainty 140′ can be due to intended and unintended design and operating parameters of optical apparatus 402. For example, poor design quality, low tolerances and in particular unknown decentering or tilting of lens elements can produce linear uncertainty. These issues can arise during manufacturing and/or during assembly. They can affect a specific optical apparatus 402 or an entire batch of them. In the latter case, if additional post-assembly calibration is not possible, the assumption of linear structural uncertainty for all members of the batch and application of reduced homography H can be a useful way of dealing with the poor manufacturing and/or assembly issues. Additional causes of structural uncertainty are discussed above in association with the embodiment exhibiting radial structural uncertainty.
In accordance with the reduced homography H of the invention, measured points {circumflex over (p)}i,j are converted into their corresponding n-vectors {circumflex over (n)}i,j. This is shown explicitly in
As in the previous embodiment, we know from Eq. 6 (restated below for convenience) that a motion of optical apparatus 402 defined by a succession of sets {R,
where I is the 3×3 identity matrix and
In the present embodiment, the planar surface is ceiling 410. In normalized homogeneous coordinates ceiling 410 is expressed by its corresponding p-vector
Therefore, for motion and rotation of optical apparatus 402 with the motion constraint of fixed offset dx from ceiling 410 homography A is:
Structural uncertainty 140′ can now be modeled in a similar manner as before (see Eq. 4), by ideal rays r′, which are vertical lines visualized in projective plane 146.
In solving the reduced homography H we will be again working with the correspondent translations of ideal rays r′ into ideal vectors
The reader is invited to check Eq. 5 and the previous embodiment to see the similarity in the reduced representation arising from this cross product with the one obtained in the case of radial structural uncertainty.
Once again, we now have to obtain a modified or reduced rotation matrix Rr appropriate for the vertical linear case. Our condition on motion is in offset dx along x, so we should choose an Euler matrix composition than is consonant with the reduced homoraphy H for this case. The composition will be different than in the radial case, where the condition on motion that was consonant with the reduced homography H involved an offset d along z (or dz).
From component rotation matrices of Eq. 2A-C we choose Euler rotations in the X-Y-X convention (instead of Z-X-Z convention used in the radial case). The composition is thus a “roll” by rotation angle ψ around the Xe-axis, then a “tilt” by rotation angle θ about the Yc-axis and finally a “yaw” by rotation angle φ around the Xe-axis again. This composition involves by Euler rotation matrices:
Since we need the transpose RT of the total rotation matrix R, the corresponding composition is taken transposed and in reverse order to yield:
Now, we modify or reduce the order of transpose RT because the x component of
and by multiplying we finally get transposed reduced rotation matrix RrT:
We notice that RrT in the case of vertical linear uncertainty 140′ is very similar to the one we obtained for radial uncertainty 140. Once again, it consist of sub-matrix C and vector
Now we again deploy Eq. 9 for homography A representing the collineation from canonical pose to unknown pose, in which we represent points pi′ with n-vectors
In this case vector
By following the procedure already outlined in the previous embodiment, we now convert the problem of finding the transpose of our reduced homography HT to the problem of finding the best estimation matrix Θ based on actually measured points {circumflex over (p)}i,j. That procedure can once again be performed as taught in the above section entitled: Reduced Homography: A General Solution.
Rather than pointer recovery, as in the radial case, the present embodiment allows for the recovery of an anchor point that is typically not in the field of view of optical apparatus 402. This is illustrated in a practical setting with the aid of the perspective diagram view of
To accomplish the task, optical apparatus 402 is mounted such that its camera coordinates (Xc,Yc,Zc) are aligned as shown in
Canonical pose of optical apparatus 402 mounted on headband 504 is thus conveniently set to when the head of subject 502 is correctly positioned on bed 506. In this situation, an anchor axis AA, which is co-extensive with Xc-axis, intersects wall 512 at the origin of world coordinates (Xw,Yw,Zw). However, when optical apparatus 402 is not in canonical pose, anchor axis AA intersects wall 512 (or, equivalently, the Yw-Zw plane) at some other point. This point of intersection of anchor axis AA and wall 512 is referred to as anchor point 514. In a practical application, it may be additionally useful to emit a beam of radiation, e.g., a laser beam from a laser pointer, that propagates from optical apparatus 402 along its Xc-axis to be able to visually inspect the instantaneous location of anchor point 514 on wall 512.
Now, the reduced homography H of the invention permits the operator of medical apparatus 508 to recover the instantaneous position of anchor point 514 on wall 512. The operator can thus determine when the head of subject 502 is properly positioned on bead 506 without the need for mounting any additional optical devices such as laser pointers or levels on the head of subject 502.
During operation, optical apparatus 402 inspects known space points Pi in its field of view and deploys the reduced homography H to recover anchor point 514, in a manner analogous to that deployed in the case of radial structural uncertainty for recovering the location of pointer 312 on display screen 304 (see
Note that Eq. 43 is very similar to Eq. 28 for pointer recovery, but in the present case Θ=(
Then, to get the actual numerical answer, we substitute for the entries of matrix C and vector
Notice that this equation is similar, but not identical to Eq. 29B. The indices are numbered differently because in this case Θ=(
Of course, in order for reduced homography H to yield accurate results the condition on the motion of optical apparatus 402 has to be enforced. This means that offset distance dx should not vary by a large amount, i.e., ε≈0. This can be ensured by positioning subject 502 on bed 506 with their head such that viewpoint O of optical apparatus 402 is maintained more or less (i.e., within ε≈0) at offset distance dx from wall 512. Of course, the actual criterion for good performance of homography H is that dx−ε/dx=1. Therefore, if offset distance dx is large, a larger deviation e is permitted.
The recovery of the remaining pose parameters and the rotation angles φ,θ,ψ in particular, whether in the case where optical apparatus 402 is mounted on robot 404 or on head of subject 502 follows the same approach as already shown above for the case of radial structural uncertainty. Rather than solving for these angles again, we remark on the symmetry between the present linear case and the previous radial case. In particular, to transform the problem from the present linear case to the radial case, we need to perform a 90° rotation around y and a 90° rotation around z. From previously provided Eqs. 2A-C we see that transformation matrix T that accomplishes that is:
The inverse of transformation matrix T, i.e., T−1, will take us from the radial case to the vertical case. In other words, the results for the radial case can be applied to the vertical case after the substitutions x→y, y→z and z→x (Euler Z-X-Z rotations becoming X-Y-X rotations).
The reduced homography H in the presence of linear structural uncertainty such as the vertical uncertainty just discussed, can be practiced with any optical apparatus that is subject to this type of uncertainty. However, the particulars of the approach make the use of some types of optical sensors and lenses preferred.
To appreciate the reasons for the specific choices, we first refer to
As already pointed out above, the presence of structural uncertainty 140′ is equivalent to space point P33 being anywhere within virtual sheet VSP33. Three possible locations of point P33 within virtual sheet VSP33 are shown, including its actual location drawn in solid line. Based on how lens 418 images, we see that the different locations within virtual sheet all map to points along a single vertical line that falls within vertical structural uncertainty 140′.
Thus, all the possible positions of space point P33 within virtual sheet VSP33 map to a single vertical row of pixels 420 on optical sensor 412, as shown.
This realization can be used to make a more advantageous choice of optical sensor 412 and lens 418.
In reviewing the above teachings, it will be clear to anyone skilled in the art, that the reduced homography H of the invention can be applied when structural uncertainty corresponds to horizontal lines. This situation is illustrated in
In the case of horizontal structural uncertainty 140″, the consonant condition on motion of optical apparatus 402 is preservation of its offset distance dy from side wall 406, rather than from ceiling 410. Note that in this case measured points {circumflex over (p)}i,j are again converted into their corresponding n-vectors {circumflex over (n)}i,j. This is shown explicitly in
Recovery of anchor point, pose parameters and rotation angles is similar to the situation described above for the case of vertical structural uncertainty. A skilled artisan will recognize that a simple transformation will allow them to use the above teachings to obtain all these parameters. Additionally, it will be appreciated that the use of cylindrical lenses and linear photo sensors is appropriate when dealing with horizontal structural uncertainty.
Furthermore, for structural uncertainty corresponding to skewed (i.e., rotated) lines, it is again possible to apply the previous teachings. Skewed lines can be converted by a simple rotation around the camera Zc-axis into the horizontal or vertical case. The consonant condition of the motion of optical apparatus 402 is also rotated to be orthogonal to the direction of the structural uncertainty.
The reduced homography H of the invention can be further expanded to make the condition on motion of the optical apparatus less of a limitation. To accomplish this, we note that the condition on motion is itself related to at least one of the pose parameters of the optical apparatus. In the radial case, it is offset distance dz that has to be maintained at a given value. Similarly, in the linear cases it is offset distances dx, dy that have to be kept substantially constant. More precisely, it is really the conditions that (d−δz)/d≈1; (d−δx)/d≈1 and (d−δy)/d≈1 that matter.
Clearly, in any of these cases when the value of offset distance d is very large, a substantial amount of deviation from the condition can be supported without significantly affecting the accuracy of pose recovery achieved with reduced homography H. Such conditions may obtain when practicing reduced homography H based on space points Pi that are very far away and where the origin of world coordinates can thus be placed very far away as well. In situations where this is not true, other means can be deployed. More precisely, the condition can be periodically reset based on the corresponding pose parameter.
In this embodiment non-collinear optical features chosen for practicing the reduced homography H include parts of a smart television 614 as well as a table 616 on which television 614 stands. Specifically, optical features belonging to television 614 are its two markings 618A, 618B and a designated pixel 620 belonging to its display screen 622. Two tray corners 624A, 624B of table 616 also server as optical features. Additional non-collinear optical features in room 600 are chosen as well, but are not specifically indicated in
Optical apparatus 602 experiences a radial structural uncertainty and hence deploys the reduced homography H of the invention as described in the first embodiment. The condition imposed on the motion of phone 604 is that it remain a certain distance dz away from screen 622 of television 614 for homography H to yield good pose recovery.
Now, offset distance dz is actually related to a pose parameter of optical apparatus 604. In fact, depending on the choice of world coordinates, dz may even be the pose parameter defining the distance between viewpoint O and the world origin, i.e., the z pose parameter.
Having a measure of this pose parameter independent of the estimation obtained by the reduced homography H performed in accordance to the invention would clearly be very advantageous. Specifically, knowing the value of the condition represented by pose parameter dz independent of our pose recovery procedure would allow us to at least monitor how well our reduced homography H will perform given any deviations observed in the value of offset distance dz.
Advantageously, optical apparatus 602 also has the well-known capability of determining distance from defocus or depth-from-defocus. This algorithmic approach to determining distance has been well-studied and is used in many practical settings. For references on the basics of applying the techniques of depth from defocus the reader is referred to Ovidu Ghita et al., “A Computational Approach for Depth from Defocus”, Vision Systems Laboratory, School of Electrical Engineering, Dublin City University, 2005, pp. 1-19 and the many references cited therein.
With the aid of the depth from defocus algorithm, optical apparatus 602 periodically determines offset distance dz with an optical auxiliary measurement. In case world coordinates are defined to be in the center of screen 622, the auxiliary optical measurement determines the distance to screen 622 based on the blurring of an image 640 displayed on screen 622. Of course, the distance estimate will be along optical axis OA of optical apparatus 602. Due to rotations this distance will not correspond exactly to offset distance dz, but it will nonetheless yield a good measurement, since user 612 will generally point at screen 622 most of the time. Also, due to the intrinsic imprecision in depth from defocus measurements, the expected accuracy of distance dz obtained in this manner will be within at least a few percent or more.
Alternatively, optical auxiliary measurement implemented by depth from defocus can be applied to measure the distance to wall 610A if the distance between wall 610A and screen 622 is known. This auxiliary measurement is especially useful when optical apparatus 602 is not pointing at screen 622. Furthermore, when wall 610A exhibits a high degree of texture the auxiliary measurement will be fairly accurate.
The offset distance dz found through the auxiliary optical measurement performed by optical apparatus 602 and the corresponding algorithm can be used for resetting the value of offset dz used in the reduced homography H. In fact, when offset distance dz is reset accurately and frequently reduced homography H can even be practiced in lieu of regular homography A at all times. Thus, structural uncertainty is no impediment to pose recovery at any reasonable offset dz.
Still another auxiliary optical measurement that can be used to measure dz involves optical range finding. Suitable devices that perform this function are widely implemented in cameras and are well known to those skilled in the art.
A first movement M1 of phone 604 that includes yaw and tilt, produces image 640A. The corresponding homography is designated Hr1. Another movement M2 of phone 604 that includes tilt and roll is shown in image 640B. The corresponding homography is designated Hr2. Movement M3 encoded in homography Hr3 contains only tilt and results in image 640C. Finally, movement M4 is a combination of all three rotation angles (yaw, pitch and roll) and it produces image 640D. The corresponding homography is Hr4.
It is noted that the mapping of movements M1, M2, M3 and M4 (also sometimes referred to as gestures) need not be one-to-one. In other words, the actual amount of rotation of image 640 from its canonical pose can be magnified (or demagnified). Thus, for any given degrees of rotation executed by user 612 image 640 may be rotated by a larger or smaller rotation angle. For example, for the comfort of user 612 the rotation may be magnified so that 1 degree of actual rotation of phone 604 translates to the rotation of image 640 by 3 degrees. A person skilled in the art of human interface design will be able to adjust the actual amounts of magnification for any rotation angle and/or their combinations to ensure a comfortable manipulating experience to user 612.
The additional advantage of using inertial unit 680 is that it can detect the gravity vector. Knowledge of this vector in conjunction with the knowledge of how phone 604 must be held by user 612 for optical apparatus 602 to be unobstructed can be used to further help in resolving any point correspondence problems that may be encountered in solving the reduced homography H. Of course, the use of point sources of polarized radiation as the optical features can also be used to help in solving the correspondence problem. As is clear from the prior description, suitable point sources of radiation include optical beacons that can be embodied by LEDs, IR LEDs, pixels of a display screen or other sources. In some cases, such sources can be modulated to aid in resolving the correspondence problem.
A person skilled in the art will realize that many types of sensor fusion can be beneficial in embodiments taught by the invention. In fact, even measurements of magnetic field can be used to help discover aspects of the pose of a camera and thus aid in the determination or bounding of changes in offset distance d.
The second component of apparatus 700 is a processor 704. Processor typically identifies the structural uncertainty based on the image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi). In particular, processor 704 is responsible for typical image processing tasks (see background section). As it performs these tasks and obtains the processed image data, it will be apparent from inspection of these data that a structural uncertainty exists. Alternatively or in addition, a system designer may inspect the output of processor 704 to confirm the existence of the structural uncertainty.
Depending on the computational load, system resources and normal operating limitation, processor 704 may include a central processing unit (CPU) and/or a graphics processing unit (GPU). A person skilled in the art will recognize that performing image processing tasks in the GPU has a number of advantages. Furthermore, processor 704 should not be considered to be limited to being physically proximate optical sensor 702. As shown in with the dashed box, processor 704 may include off-board and remote computational resources 704′. For example, certain difficult to process environments with few optical features and poor contrast can be outsourced to high-speed network resources rather than being processed locally. Of course, precaution should be taken to avoid undue data transfer delays and time-stamping of data is advised whenever remote resources 704′ are deployed.
Based on the structural uncertainty detected by examining the measured data, processor 704 selects a reduced representation of the measured image points {circumflex over (p)}i=({circumflex over (x)}i,ŷi) by rays {circumflex over (r)}i defined in homogeneous coordinates and contained in a projective plane of optical apparatus 700 based on the structural uncertainty. The manner in which this is done has been taught above.
The third component of apparatus 700 is an estimation module 706 for estimating at least one of the pose parameters with respect to the canonical pose by the reduced homography H using said rays {circumflex over (r)}i, as taught above. In fact, estimation module 706 computes the entire estimation matrix Θ and provides its output to a pose recovery module 710. As shown by the connection between estimation module 706 and off-board and remote computational resources 704′ it is again possible to outsource the task of computing estimation matrix ss. For example, if the number of measurements is large and the optimization is too computationally challenging, outsourcing it to resources 704′ can be the correct design choice. Again, precaution should be taken to avoid undue data transfer delays and time-stamping of data is advised whenever remote resources 704′ are deployed.
Module 710 proceeds to recover the pointer, the anchor point, and/or any of the other pose parameters in accordance with the above teachings. The specific pose data, of course, will depend on the application. Therefore, the designer may further program pose recovery module 710 to only provide some selected data that involves trigonometric combinations of the Euler angles and linear movements of optical apparatus 700 that are relevant to the task at hand.
In addition, when an auxiliary measurement apparatus 708 is present, its data can also be used to find out the value of offset d and to continuously adjust that condition as used in computing the reduced homography H. In addition, any data fusion algorithm that combines the usually frequent measurements performed by the auxiliary unit can be used to improve pose recovery. This may be particularly advantageous when the auxiliary unit is an inertial unit.
In the absence of auxiliary measurement apparatus 708, it is processor 704 that sets the condition on the motion of optical apparatus 700. As described above, the condition, i.e., the value of offset distance d, needs to be consonant with the reduced representation. For example, in the radial case it is the distance dz, in the vertical case it is the distance dx and in the horizontal case it is the distance dy. Processor 704 may know that value a priori if a mechanism is used to enforce the condition. Otherwise, it may even try to determine the instantaneous value of the offset from any data it has, including the magnification of objects in its field of view. Of course, it is preferable that auxiliary measurement apparatus 708 provide that information in an auxiliary measurement that is made independent of the optical measurements on which the reduced homography H is practiced.
Many systems, devices and items, as well as camera units themselves can benefit from deploying the reduced homography H taught in the present invention. For a small subset of just a few specific items that can derive useful information from having on-board optical apparatus deploying the reduced homography H the reader is referred to U.S. Published Application 2012/0038549 to Mandella et al.
It will be evident to a person skilled in the art that the present invention admits of various other embodiments. Therefore, its scope should be judged by the claims and their legal equivalents.