Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Three-Dimensional Machine Vision : The Springer International Engineering and Computer Science - Takeo Kanade

Three-Dimensional Machine Vision

By: Takeo Kanade

Hardcover | 5 March 1999

At a Glance

Hardcover


$489.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $122.44 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 7 business days

Arobotmustperceivethethree-dimensionalworldifitistobeeffective there. Yet recovering 3-D information from projected images is difficult, and still remains thesubjectofbasic research. Alternatively, onecan use sensorsthatcanprovidethree-dimensionalrangeinformationdirectly. The technique ofprojecting light-stripesstartedto be used in industrialobject recognition systems asearly asthe 1970s,andtime-of-flight laser-scanning range finders became available for outdoor mobile robotnavigation in the mid-eighties. Once range data are obtained, a vision system must still describe the scene in terms of 3-D primitives such as edges, surfaces, and volumes, and recognize objeCts of interest. Today, the art of sensing, extractingfeatures, and recognizing objectsbymeans ofthree-dimensional rangedataisoneofthemostexcitingresearchareasincomputervision. Three-Dimensional Machine Vision is a collection of papers dealing withthree-dimensionalrangedata. Theauthorsarepioneeringresearchers: some are founders and others are bringingnew excitements in thefield. I have tried to select milestone papers, and my goalhas beento make this bookareferenceworkforresearchersinthree-dimensionalvision. The book is organized into four parts: 3-D Sensors, 3-D Feature Extractions,ObjectRecognitionAlgorithms,andSystemsandApplications. Part I includes four papers which describe the development of unique, capable 3-D range sensors, as well as discussions of optical, geometrical, electronic, and computational issues. Mundy and Porter describe asensor systembasedonstructuredilluminationforinspectingmetalliccastings. In order to achieve high-speed data acquisition, it uses multiple lightstripes withwavelength multiplexing. Case, Jalkio,andKim alsopresentamulti­ stripe system and discuss various design issues in range sensing by triangulation. ThenumericalstereocameradevelopedbyAltschuler, Bae, Altschuler, Dijak, Tamburino, and Woolford projects space-coded grid patterns which are generated by an electro-optical programmable spatial viii PREFACE light modulator. Kanade and Fuhrman present a proximity sensor using multipleLEDswhich areconically arranged. Itcan measurebothdistance andorientationofanobject'ssurface.

More in Robotics

LEGO Gadgets : Gadgets (Klutz) - Editors of Klutz

RRP $34.99

$25.75

26%
OFF
Recent Developments in Mechatronics - Noel Cole
Fundamentals of Robotics - Julian Evans

$461.75

Learning the Art of Electronics : A Hands-On Lab Course - Thomas C. Hayes
Artificial Intelligence For Dummies : For Dummies (Computer/Tech) - John Paul Mueller
Guidance and Control of Unmanned Vehicles - Rafael  Yanushevsky

RRP $252.00

$219.75

13%
OFF
The Robot Era : Routledge Revivals - P. E. Cleator

RRP $179.00

$158.99

11%
OFF
Robotics for Architectural Restoration - Sara Codarin

RRP $305.00

$263.75

14%
OFF
Robotics for Architectural Restoration - Sara Codarin