DocumentCode
3206459
Title
The geometry of visual interception
Author
Huang, Liuqing ; Aloimonos, Yiannis
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Maryland Univ., College Park, MD, USA
fYear
1992
fDate
15-18 Jun 1992
Firstpage
741
Lastpage
743
Abstract
Under the traditional paradigm of considering vision as a recovery problem, visual interception is just another application of the structure-from-motion module. However, the inherent difficulties of three-dimensional reconstruction have delayed any real-time applications. The authors offer a robust solution under the active qualitative vision paradigm. From the image intensity function, they obtain the locomotive intrinsics of the agent and the target. Based on this relative information, they present a control strategy that decides in real time whether the velocity of the agent should be increased or decreased at any time instant, thus guiding the agent to intercept the target. The problem of visual interception can thus be solved by simple computation without correspondence
Keywords
motion estimation; position control; real-time systems; tracking; active qualitative vision; image intensity function; locomotive intrinsics; real-time applications; recovery problem; structure-from-motion module; three-dimensional reconstruction; visual interception; Application software; Automation; Cameras; Computer science; Computer vision; Educational institutions; Geometry; Humans; Image reconstruction; Laboratories;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 1992. Proceedings CVPR '92., 1992 IEEE Computer Society Conference on
Conference_Location
Champaign, IL
ISSN
1063-6919
Print_ISBN
0-8186-2855-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CVPR.1992.223185
Filename
223185
Link To Document