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ECCV
2008
Springer

Temporal Dithering of Illumination for Fast Active Vision

15 years 2 months ago
Temporal Dithering of Illumination for Fast Active Vision
Active vision techniques use programmable light sources, such as projectors, whose intensities can be controlled over space and time. We present a broad framework for fast active vision using Digital Light Processing (DLP) projectors. The digital micromirror array (DMD) in a DLP projector is capable of switching mirrors "on" and "off" at high speeds (106 /s). An off-the-shelf DLP projector, however, effectively operates at much lower rates (30-60Hz) by emitting smaller intensities that are integrated over time by a sensor (eye or camera) to produce the desired brightness value. Our key idea is to exploit this "temporal dithering" of illumination, as observed by a high-speed camera. The dithering encodes each brightness value uniquely and may be used in conjunction with virtually any active vision technique. We apply our approach to five well-known problems: (a) structured light-based range finding, (b) photometric stereo, (c) illumination de-multiplexing, ...
Srinivasa G. Narasimhan, Sanjeev J. Koppal, Shunta
Added 15 Oct 2009
Updated 15 Oct 2009
Type Conference
Year 2008
Where ECCV
Authors Srinivasa G. Narasimhan, Sanjeev J. Koppal, Shuntaro Yamazaki
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