DocumentCode
1395865
Title
Calibration of an active binocular head
Author
Shih, Sheng-Wen ; Hung, Yi-Ping ; Lin, Wei-Song
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Inf. Eng., Nat. Chi Nan Univ., Nantou, Taiwan
Volume
28
Issue
4
fYear
1998
fDate
7/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
426
Lastpage
442
Abstract
In this paper, we show how an active binocular head, the IIS head, can be easily calibrated with very high accuracy. Our calibration method can also be applied to many other binocular heads. In addition to the proposal and demonstration of a four-stage calibration process, there are three major contributions in this paper. First, we propose a motorized-focus lens (MFL) camera model which assumes constant nominal extrinsic parameters. The advantage of having constant extrinsic parameters is to having a simple head/eye relation. Second, a calibration method for the MFL camera model is proposed in this paper, which separates estimation of the image center and effective focal length from estimation of the camera orientation and position. This separation has been proved to be crucial; otherwise, estimates of camera parameters would be very noise-sensitive. Thirdly, we show that, once the parameters of the MFL camera model is calibrated, a nonlinear recursive least-square estimator can be used to refine all the 35 kinematic parameters. Real experiments have shown that the proposed method can achieve accuracy of one pixel prediction error and 0.2 pixel epipolar error, even when all the joints, including the left and right focus motors, are moved simultaneously. This accuracy is good enough for many 3D vision applications, such as navigation, object tracking and reconstruction
Keywords
active vision; calibration; least squares approximations; noise; recursive estimation; stereo image processing; 3D vision applications; IIS head; MFL camera model; active binocular head; calibration; camera orientation; camera parameter estimates; camera position; constant nominal extrinsic parameters; four-stage calibration process; kinematic parameters; motorized-focus lens camera model; nonlinear recursive least-square estimator; simple head/eye relation; Calibration; Cameras; Focusing; Head; Kinematics; Lenses; Magnetic flux leakage; Parameter estimation; Proposals; Recursive estimation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1083-4427
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/3468.686704
Filename
686704
Link To Document