Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5032077 Journal of Biomechanics 2017 23 Pages PDF
Abstract
In order to calibrate the camera stereo pair, black spherical markers placed on two calibration tools, used both in-air and underwater, and a two-step nonlinear optimization were exploited. The 3D reconstruction accuracy of testing markers and the repeatability of the estimated camera parameters accounted for system performance. For both environments, statistical tests were focused on the comparison of the different camera configurations. Then, each camera configuration was compared across the two environments. In all assessed resolutions, and in both environments, the reconstruction error (true distance between the two testing markers) was less than 3mm and the error related to the working volume diagonal was in the range of 1:2000 (3×1.3×1.5 m3) to 1:7000 (4.5×2.2×1.5 m3) in agreement with the literature. Statistically, the 3D accuracy obtained in the in-air environment was poorer (p<10−5) than the one in the underwater environment, across all the tested camera configurations. Related to the repeatability of the camera parameters, we found a very low variability in both environments (1.7% and 2.9%, in-air and underwater). This result encourage the use of ASC technology to perform quantitative reconstruction both in-air and underwater environments.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Biomedical Engineering
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