Photo-consistency
In computer vision Photo-consistency determines whether a given voxel is occupied. A voxel is considered to be photo consistent when its color appears to be similar to all the cameras that can see it.[1] Most voxel coloring or space carving techniques require using photo consistency as a check condition in Image-based modeling and rendering applications.
Usage
3D Volumetric Reconstruction.[2]
- Image registration.[3]
- Multi-view reconstruction.[4]
gollark: How elegant.
gollark: But that would be verbose. We're not writing Java here.
gollark: Just write a macron to do it.
gollark: It's already too late. I am rethinking Minoteaur's design again.
gollark: π/3i.
References
- Jianfeng Yin and Jeremy R. Cooperstock, A New Photo Consistency Test for Voxel Coloring, Proceedings of the Second Canadian Conference on Computer and Robot Vision (CRV’05), IEEE
- Alexander Hornung, and Leif Kobbelt, Robust and Efficient Photo-Consistency Estimation for Volumetric 3D Reconstruction, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Springer Berlin / Heidelberg.
- Zsolt Janko, Dmitry Chetverikov, Photo-Consistency Based Registration of an Uncalibrated Image Pair to a 3D Surface Model Using Genetic Algorithm, Proceedings of the 3D Data Processing, Visualization, and Transmission, 2nd International Symposium.
- Sudipta N. Sinha Marc Pollefeys, Multi-view Reconstruction using Photo-consistency and Exact Silhouette Constraints: A Maximum-Flow Formulation.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.