Paper
26 January 2006 3D from arbitrary 2D video
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 6056, Three-Dimensional Image Capture and Applications VII; 60560B (2006) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.650483
Event: Electronic Imaging 2006, 2006, San Jose, California, United States
Abstract
In this paper, we present methods to synthesize 3D video from arbitrary 2D video. The 2D video is analyzed by computing frame-by-frame motion maps. For this computation, several methods were tested, including optical flow, segmentation and correlation based target location. Using the computed motion maps, the video undergoes analysis and the frames are segmented to provide object-wise depth ordering. The frames are then used to synthesize stereo pairs. This is performed by resampling frames on a grid that is governed by a corresponding depth-map. In order to improve the quality of the synthetic video, as well as to enable 2D viewing where 3D visualization is not possible, several techniques for image enhancement are used. In our test case, anaglyph projection was selected as the 3D visualization method, as the method is mostly suited to standard displays. The drawback of this method is ghosting artifacts. In our implementation we minimize these unwanted artifacts by modifying the computed depth-maps using non-linear transformations. Defocusing of one anaglyph color component was also used to counter such artifacts. Our results show that the suggested methods enable synthesis of high quality 3D videos.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ianir A. Ideses and Leonid P. Yaroslavsky "3D from arbitrary 2D video", Proc. SPIE 6056, Three-Dimensional Image Capture and Applications VII, 60560B (26 January 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.650483
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KEYWORDS
Video

3D image processing

Visualization

3D visualizations

3D video streaming

Image quality

Cameras

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