The present invention generally relates to wireless sensor based location and more particularly to wireless sensor based camera location and orientation.
There are several existing systems that provide a camera position and orientation information. Free-D camera tracking system is developed by the British Broadcasting Co. BBC research and development R&D. It uses a number of markers placed out-of-shot, for example on the ceiling of a studio, that are viewed by a small auxiliary camera mounted on the side of each normal camera. The markers are composed of a number of concentric white and black rings forming a type of barcode, each marker has a unique code number. A serial digital video signal from the auxiliary camera is analyzed by a purpose-built hardware unit to calculate the precise position and orientation of the camera in real time.
Bluei puts out a product line that uses another technique that can acquire position information. It is a high-resolution camera-based tracking system that can be mounted to any movable device, for example a studio dolly, and reads a floor covering that is digitally encoded with a specially designed pattern. The floor pattern has been designed and tested to be bluescreen compatible, thereby allowing the system to be used unobtrusively within virtual reality studios.
Although the Global Positioning System GPS can also be used to globally locate the position of the camera, it would not be accurate enough for the requirements of a virtual studio. Products providing orientation information are available from Vinten and Radamec. Also FreeD provides the orientation of the camera, too.
The current location and orientation techniques are expensive, require tedious and daily system calibration. They cannot be easily extended to support other applications that are not possible with Free-D. For instance, the same framework cannot be used to acquire other information such as temperature, humidity, or vibration. Accordingly, there is a need for a camera location and orientation systems that overcomes the cost and operating disadvantages of existing systems.
An apparatus includes a receiver for a camera for signal communication with transmitters in known locations for determining location of the camera, a compass for the camera for determining orientation of the camera, and a device for determining time associated with the determined camera location and orientation. Preferably, determining camera location is done by determining the location by a receiver associated with the camera communicating with a transmitter positioned at a known location. A compass is employed determining orientation of the camera and a device communicating with a GPS or cellular network is employed for determining the time. The location, orientation and time for the camera is wirelessly transmitted for constructing trajectory and movement of the camera.
In further aspect of the invention, a method includes determining camera location and orientation information, determining time coincident with the camera orientation and location information, and gathering the determined camera location information, camera orientation and time for wireless transmission.
The advantages, nature, and various additional features of the invention will appear more fully upon consideration of the illustrative embodiments now to be described in detail in connection with accompanying drawings wherein:
It should be understood that the drawings are for purposes of illustrating the concepts of the invention and are not necessarily the only possible configuration for illustrating the invention.
The position and the orientation information of camera are important meta-data information for the purpose of post-processing such as Visual special effects (VSF). The invention is directed to a wireless sensor network that can automatically pick up the camera position and orientation information as well time information, and wirelessly transmit the data to the back-end server. The devices for implementing the invention are small enough so that they can be attached to the camera. Compared to existing solutions, the invention is less costly and can be easily extended to support other applications. For instance, the same framework can be used to acquire other information such as temperature, humidity, or vibration. The inventive orientation and location system can reduce and simplify the system calibration.
Referring to the diagrams 10,20 of
Referring to
The Cricket location system 2 can provide fine-grained location information to applications running on various devices such as handhelds, laptops, and sensor nodes. This data can range from space identifiers (e.g., room numbers), to position coordinates, to compass-like orientation. Cricket is intended for use indoors or in urban areas where the Global Positioning System (GPS) does not work well. Cricket uses a combination of radio frequency (RF) and ultrasound technologies. Wall mounted and/or ceiling mounted beacons placed throughout a building publish information on a radio frequency RF channel. With each radio frequency RF chip or signal transmission the beacon sends a concurrent ultrasonic pulse. Receivers attached to mobile devices listen for the radio frequency RF signals, and after receiving the first few bits, listen for the corresponding ultrasonic pulse. Cricket calculates distance estimates between devices with receivers and nearby beacons by running algorithms based on the difference in propagation speeds between radio frequency RF (light) and ultrasound (sound).
A wireless transmitter 1,22 is attached to the backend of a meta-data server 21, as shown in
The location sensor, preferably a Cricket based location sensor system, 2 provides the camera position information. As shown by the diagram 30 in
Orientation information is gathered by use of a digital compass 3 to offer camera heading information. Combining the location system with the digital compass allows constructing the camera's moving trajectory and to which direction it is moving to shoot or record the movie.
Time information can be gathered several ways, including using a Global position System GPS receiver or a special receiver to get the time information from cellular towers, as done by cellular phones.
A wireless transmitter 1 as shown in
Having described a preferred embodiment for accurate wireless based camera location and orientation, it is noted that modifications and variations can be made by persons skilled in the art in light of the above teachings. Having thus described the invention with the details and particularity required by the patent laws, what is claimed and desired protected by Letters Patent is set forth in the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2007/001336 | 1/19/2007 | WO | 00 | 7/13/2009 |