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What can Computer Graphics expect from 3D Computer Vision?
Author(s) -
Šára Radim
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
computer graphics forum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.578
H-Index - 120
eISSN - 1467-8659
pISSN - 0167-7055
DOI - 10.1111/j.1467-8659.2007.01045.x
Subject(s) - computer science , computer graphics , computer graphics (images) , pipeline (software) , ambiguity , computer vision , artificial intelligence , graphics , real time computer graphics , heap (data structure) , image processing , 3d computer graphics , image (mathematics) , algorithm , programming language
Computer Vision is a discipline whose ultimate goal is to interpret optical images of real scenes. It is well understood that such a problem is cursed by ambiguity of interpretation and uncertainty of evidence. Despite imperfectness of results due to the scenes never following our prior models exactly, Computer Vision has achieved a significant progress in the past two decades.This talk will outline the quest of 3D Computer Vision by describing a processing pipeline that receives a heap of unorganized images from unknown cameras and produces a consistent 3D geometric model together with camera calibrations. We will see how new algorithms allow the standard conception of the pipeline as a series of independent processing steps gradually transform to a single complex, yet efficient vision task. We will identify some points where linking Computer Vision and Computer Graphics would bring significant progress.

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