Title :
Automatic Construction of 3-D Building Model From Airborne LIDAR Data Through 2-D Snake Algorithm
Author :
Jianhua Yan ; Keqi Zhang ; Chengcui Zhang ; Shu-Ching Chen ; Narasimhan, Giri
Author_Institution :
Amazon.com, Inc., Seattle, WA, USA
Abstract :
The snake algorithm has been proposed to solve many remote sensing and computer vision problems such as object segmentation, surface reconstruction, and object tracking. This paper introduces a framework for 3-D building model construction from LIDAR data based on the snake algorithm. It consists of nonterrain object identification, building and tree separation, building topology extraction, and adjustment by the snake algorithm. The challenging task in applying the snake algorithm to building topology adjustment is to find the global minima of energy functions derived for 2-D building topology. The traditional snake algorithm uses dynamic programming for computing the global minima of energy functions which is limited to snake problems with 1-D topology (i.e., a contour) and cannot handle problems with 2-D topology. In this paper, we have extended the dynamic programming method to address the snake problems with a 2-D planar topology using a novel graph reduction technique. Given a planar snake, a set of reduction operations is defined and used to simplify the graph of the planar snake into a set of isolated vertices while retaining the minimal energy of the graph. Another challenging task for 3-D building model reconstruction is how to enforce different kinds of geometric constraints during building topology refinement. This framework proposed two energy functions, deviation and direction energy functions, to enforce multiple geometric constraints on 2-D topology refinement naturally and efficiently. To examine the effectiveness of the framework, the framework has been applied on different data sets to construct 3-D building models from airborne LIDAR data. The results demonstrate that the proposed snake algorithm successfully found the global optima in polynomial time for all of the building topologies and generated satisfactory 3-D models for most of the buildings in the study areas.
Keywords :
airborne radar; buildings (structures); dynamic programming; graph theory; optical radar; polynomials; 1D topology; 2D planar snake graph algorithm; 2D topology refinement; 3D building construction model; airborne LIDAR data; building topology adjustment; building topology extraction; computer vision problem; dynamic programming method; energy function; global minima computing; graph reduction technique; multiple geometric constraint; nonterrain object identification; object segmentation; object tracking; polynomial time; remote sensing; surface reconstruction; tree separation; Atmospheric modeling; Buildings; Data models; Heuristic algorithms; Laser radar; Solid modeling; Topology; Light detection and ranging (LIDAR); snake algorithm; topology;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2014.2312393