1 October 1994 Occlusion-free monocular three-dimensional vision system
Vassilios E. Theodoracatos
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
This paper describes a new, occlusion-free, monocular three-dimensional vision system. A matrix of light beams (lasers, fiber optics, etc.), substantially parallel to the optic axis of the lens of a video camera, is projected onto a scene. The corresponding coordinates of the perspective image generated on the video-camera sensor, the focal length of the camera lens, and the lateral position of the projected beams of light are used to determine the "perspective depth" z* of the three-dimensional real image in the space between the lens and the image plane. Direct inverse perspective transformations are used to reconstruct the three-dimensional real-world scene. This system can lead to the development of three-dimensional real-image sensing devices for manufacturing, medical, and defense-related applications. If combined with existing technology, it has high potential for the development of three-dimensional television.
Vassilios E. Theodoracatos "Occlusion-free monocular three-dimensional vision system," Optical Engineering 33(10), (1 October 1994). https://doi.org/10.1117/12.179394
Published: 1 October 1994
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CITATIONS
Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
3D image processing

Cameras

Image sensors

Image segmentation

Sensors

3D image reconstruction

3D vision

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