Title of article
Corneal Imaging System: Environment from Eyes
Author/Authors
KO NISHINO، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
18
From page
23
To page
40
Abstract
This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of exactly what visual information about the world is
embedded within a single image of an eye. It turns out that the cornea of an eye and a camera viewing the eye
form a catadioptric imaging system. We refer to this as a corneal imaging system. Unlike a typical catadioptric
system, a corneal one is flexible in that the reflector (cornea) is not rigidly attached to the camera. Using a geometric
model of the cornea based on anatomical studies, its 3D location and orientation can be estimated from a single
image of the eye. Once this is done, a wide-angle view of the environment of the person can be obtained from
the image. In addition, we can compute the projection of the environment onto the retina with its center aligned
with the gaze direction. This foveated retinal image reveals what the person is looking at. We present a detailed
analysis of the characteristics of the corneal imaging system including field of view, resolution and locus of
viewpoints. When both eyes of a person are captured in an image, we have a stereo corneal imaging system. We
analyze the epipolar geometry of this stereo system and show how it can be used to compute 3D structure. The
framework we present in this paper for interpreting eye images is passive and non-invasive. It has direct implications
for several fields including visual recognition, human-machine interfaces, computer graphics and human affect
studies.
Keywords
Eye , Cornea , catadioptric imaging system , stereo , Panorama , retinal projection
Journal title
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER VISION
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER VISION
Record number
828223
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