DocumentCode
2692206
Title
What can projections of flow fields tell us about the visual motion
Author
Fejes, Sandor ; Davis, Larry S.
Author_Institution
Center for Autom. Res., Maryland Univ., College Park, MD, USA
fYear
1998
fDate
4-7 Jan 1998
Firstpage
979
Lastpage
986
Abstract
The dimensionality of visual motion analysis can be reduced by analyzing projections of flow vector fields. In contrast to motion vector fields, these projections exhibit simple geometric properties which are invariant to the scene structure and depend only on the camera motion. Using these properties, structure and motion can be either completely or partially decoupled. We estimate motion parameters from projections of flow fields by using robust techniques, implemented an a reclusive observer model. The model is applicable to general camera motion and to large field of view and requires no point correspondence. We demonstrate our projection method on the problem of detecting independently moving objects from a moving camera. Using the projection approach, the problem can be reduced to a one-dimensional optimization process which involves robust line-fitting and outlier detection. Instantaneous detection measurements are integrated temporally using tracking and spatially applying grouping of coherently moving points
Keywords
image sequences; motion estimation; camera motion; egomotion estimation; flow fields; flow vector fields; line fitting; moving camera; moving objects; visual motion; visual motion analysis; Automation; Cameras; Educational institutions; Layout; Motion analysis; Motion detection; Motion estimation; Object detection; Parameter estimation; Robustness;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Vision, 1998. Sixth International Conference on
Conference_Location
Bombay
Print_ISBN
81-7319-221-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICCV.1998.710835
Filename
710835
Link To Document