Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
526073 Computer Vision and Image Understanding 2008 22 Pages PDF
Abstract

We are concerned with dense height map reconstruction from aerial oblique image sequences. This configuration occurs when estimating a DSM (digital surface model) of areas where flying over is not allowed or for updating an on-board DSM, for instance, in trajectory planning with obstacle avoidance.We present a complete process starting from a partially calibrated sequence and leading to an estimated height map. The calibration step consists in refining the extrinsic parameters given by on-board ego-motion sensors (GPS and inertial measurement unit, IMU) by means of interest points tracking and bundle adjustment. We then propose a dense matching process based on the minimization of a multi-view pixelwise similarity criterion combined with a discretized L1-norm or total variation (TV) regularization term. Minimization is conducted thanks to an optimal graph-cut approach. Occlusions are accounted for without additional computational cost by a modification of the similarity criterion based on a dictionary of visibility patterns.Finally, two ways of refinement of the height map are proposed. The first one uses a local similarity minimization followed by non-linear Gaussian smoothing. The second relies on a novel approach to increase the height map resolution which combines multi-view 3-D reconstruction and image super-resolution.This method is validated on various synthetic and real aerial sequences, on either side-looking or forward-looking configurations.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
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