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1 – 2 of 2Chen Peng, Dong Fangmin, Zhao Chunhua and Guan Tao
The purpose of this paper is to present a novel registration method for augmented reality (AR) systems based on robust estimation of trifocal tensor using point and line…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to present a novel registration method for augmented reality (AR) systems based on robust estimation of trifocal tensor using point and line correspondence simultaneously.
Design/methodology/approach
The proposed method distinguishes itself in following three ways: first, to establish the world coordinate system, the restriction that the four specified points must form an approximate square is relaxed, the only requirement is that these four points should not be collinear. Second, besides feature points, line segments are also used to calculate the needed trifocal tensors. The registration process can still be achieved even without the use of feature points. Third, to estimate trifocal tensors precisely, progressive sample consensus (PROSAC) is used instead of random sample consensus to remove outliers.
Findings
As shown in the experiments, the proposed method really enhances the usability of this system. To calculate trifocal tensor, a PROSAC based algebraic minimization algorithm is put forward which improves the accuracy and reduces the computation complexity.
Research limitations/implications
In current system, it is stipulated that there is no large rotation of the user's head relative to the registration scenes, because the NCC will degrade when there is a large rotation between images.
Practical implications
A more robust feature matching strategy is needed. Treating feature matching as a classification problem may be a good choice.
Originality/value
This paper presents a novel registration approach for AR system.
Details
Keywords
China has a bad reputation — justified or not — for corruption: in a recent Transparency International survey, it was listed by US and European businesspeople as one of the three…
Abstract
China has a bad reputation — justified or not — for corruption: in a recent Transparency International survey, it was listed by US and European businesspeople as one of the three most corrupt countries in Asia, though its ranking fell slightly in 1996. A national survey revealed that ordinary Chinese regard corruption as the most serious problem after inflation, though 52 per cent expressed doubt that the Government could do anything about it. In 1995, in Beijing alone, 1,085 cases of corruption were uncovered. In 1996, in the Working Report of the Supreme Peoples's Procuratorate, the Chief Procurator Zhang Siqing observed: