Open Access
Hidden Surface Removal in Augmented Reality: Hand Region Extraction using PCA
Author(s) -
Takahiro Ishizu,
Makoto Sakamoto,
Kenji Sakoma
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international journal of recent technology and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2277-3878
DOI - 10.35940/ijrte.e6775.018520
Subject(s) - computer science , augmented reality , computer vision , artificial intelligence , object (grammar) , process (computing) , context (archaeology) , virtual reality , range (aeronautics) , principal component analysis , engineering , geography , archaeology , aerospace engineering , operating system
Recently, augmented Reality (AR) is growing rapidly and much attention has been focused on interaction techniques between users and virtual objects, such as the user directly manipulating virtual objects with his/her bare hands. Therefore, the authors believe that more accurate overlay techniques will be required to interact more seamlessly. On the other hand, in AR technology, since the 3-dimensional (3D) model is superimposed on the image of the real space afterwards, it is always displayed on the front side than the hand. Thus, it becomes an unnatural scene in some cases (occlusion problem). In this study, this system considers the object-context relations between the user's hand and the virtual object by acquiring depth information of the user's finger using a depth sensor. In addition, the system defines the color range of the user's hand by performing principal component analysis (PCA) on the color information near the finger position obtained from the depth sensor and setting a threshold. Then, this system extracts an area of the hand by using the definition of the color range of the user's hand. Furthermore, the fingers are distinguished by using the Canny method. In this way, this system realizes hidden surface removal along the area of the user's hand. In the evaluation experiment, it is confirmed that the hidden surface removal in this study make it possible to distinguish between finger boundaries and to clarify and process finger contours.