• DocumentCode
    107635
  • Title

    Rigorous Geometric Self-Calibrating Bundle Adjustment for a Dual Fluoroscopic Imaging System

  • Author

    Lichti, Derek D. ; Sharma, Gulshan B. ; Kuntze, Gregor ; Mund, Braden ; Beveridge, Jillian E. ; Ronsky, Janet L.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Geomatics Eng., Univ. of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
  • Volume
    34
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Feb. 2015
  • Firstpage
    589
  • Lastpage
    598
  • Abstract
    High-speed dual fluoroscopy is a noninvasive imaging technology for three-dimensional skeletal kinematics analysis that finds numerous biomechanical applications. Accurate reconstruction of bone translations and rotations from dual-fluoroscopic data requires accurate calibration of the imaging geometry and the many imaging distortions that corrupt the data. Direct linear transformation methods are commonly applied for performing calibration using a two-step process that suffers from a number of potential shortcomings including that each X-ray source and corresponding camera must be calibrated separately. Consequently, the true imaging set-up and the constraints it presents are not incorporated during calibration. A method to overcome such drawbacks is the single-step self-calibrating bundle adjustment method. This procedure, based on the collinearity principle augmented with imaging distortion models and geometric constraints, has been developed and is reported herein. Its efficacy is shown with a carefully controlled experiment comprising 300 image pairs with 48 507 image points. Application of all geometric constraints and a 31 parameter distortion model resulted in up to 91% improvement in terms of precision (model fit) and up to 71% improvement in terms of 3-D point reconstruction accuracy (0.3-0.4 mm). The accuracy of distance reconstruction was improved from 0.3±2.0 mm to 0.2 ±1.1 mm and angle reconstruction accuracy was improved from -0.03±0.55° to 0.01±0.06°. Such positioning accuracy will allow for the accurate quantification of in vivo arthrokinematics crucial for skeletal biomechanics investigations.
  • Keywords
    biomechanics; biomedical optical imaging; bone; calibration; cameras; diagnostic radiography; image reconstruction; kinematics; medical image processing; orthopaedics; 3D point reconstruction accuracy; X-ray source; angle reconstruction accuracy; bone rotations; bone translations; camera; direct linear transformation methods; dual-fluoroscopic data; high-speed dual fluoroscopic imaging system; image pairs; image points; imaging geometry; in vivo arthrokinematics; parameter distortion model; rigorous geometric self-calibrating bundle adjustment; single-step self-calibrating bundle adjustment method; skeletal biomechanics; three-dimensional skeletal kinematic analysis; Calibration; Cameras; Mathematical model; Optical distortion; Three-dimensional displays; X-ray imaging; Biomechanics; bundle adjustment; dual fluoroscopy; self-calibration;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0278-0062
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TMI.2014.2362993
  • Filename
    6923442