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Announcing the Final Examination of Mr. Jiangjian Xiao

for the degree of Philosophy of Science



Date: October 29, 2004
Time: 2:30 p.m.
Room: CSB 232
Dissertation title: Image-Based View Synthesis

Abstract:
 

This dissertation deals with the image-based approach to synthesize a virtual scene using sparse images or a video sequence without the use of 3D models. In our scenario, a real dynamic or static scene is captured by a set of un-calibrated images from different viewpoints. After automatically recovering the geometric transformations between these images, a series of photo-realistic virtual views can be rendered and a virtual environment covered by these several static cameras can be synthesized. This image-based approach has applications in object recognition, object transfer, video synthesis and video compression. In this dissertation, I have contributed to several sub-problems related to image based view synthesis.  

 

Before image-based view synthesis can be performed images needs to be segmented into individual objects.  Assuming that a scene can approximately be  described by multiple planar regions, I have developed  a robust and novel approach to automatically extract a set of affine or projective  transformations induced by these regions, correctly detect the occlusion pixels over multiple consecutive frames, and accurately segment the scene into several motion layers. First, a number of seed regions using correspondences in two frames are determined,  and the seed regions are expanded and outliers are  rejected  employing the graph cuts method integrated with level set representation. Next, these initial regions are merged into several initial layers according to the motion similarity. Third, the occlusion order constraints on multiple frames are explored, which guarantee that the occlusion area increases with the temporal order in a short period and effectively maintains segmentation consistency over multiple consecutive frames. Then the correct layer segmentation is obtained by using a graph cuts algorithm, and the occlusions between the overlapping layers are explicitly determined. Several experimental results are demonstrated to show that our approach is effective and robust.

/projects/layer_registration/

 

Recovering the geometrical transformations among images of a scene is a prerequisite step for image-based view synthesis. I have developed a wide baseline matching algorithm to identify the correspondences between two un-calibrated images, and to further determine the geometric relationship between  images, such as epipolar geometry or projective transformation. In our approach, a set of salient features, edge-corners, are detected to provide robust and consistent matching primitives. Then, based on the Singular Value Decomposition (SVD) of an affine matrix, we effectively quantize the search space into two independent subspaces for  rotation angle and scaling factor, and then we use a two-stage affine matching algorithm to obtain robust matches between these two frames. The experimental results on a number of wide baseline images strongly demonstrate that our matching method outperforms the state-of-art algorithms even under the significant camera motion, illumination variation, occlusion, and self-similarity.

/projects/widematching/index.htm

Given the wide baseline matches among images  I  have developed a novel method for Dynamic view morphing . Dynamic view morphing deals with the scenes containing moving objects in presence of camera motion. The objects can be  rigid or non-rigid, each of them can move in any orientation or direction. My method can generate a series of continuous and physically accurate intermediate views from only two reference images without any  knowledge about 3D. The procedure consists of three steps: segmentation, morphing and post-warping. Given a boundary connection constraint, the source and target scenes are segmented into several layers for morphing. Based on the decomposition of affine transformation between corresponding points, we uniquely determine a physically correct path for post-warping by the least distortion method. I have successfully generalized the dynamic scene synthesis problem from the simple scene with  only rotation  to the dynamic scene containing non-rigid objects. My method can handle dynamic rigid or non-rigid objects, including complicated objects such as humans. /projects/viewMorphing/index.html

Finally, I have also developed  a novel algorithm for tri-view morphing. This is  an efficient image-based method  to navigate a scene based on only three wide-baseline un-calibrated images without the explicit use of a 3D model. After automatically recovering corresponding points between each pair of images using our wide baseline matching method, an accurate trifocal plane is extracted from the trifocal tensor implied in these three images. Next, employing a trinocular-stereo algorithm and barycentric blending technique, we generate an arbitrary novel view to navigate the scene in a 2D space. Furthermore, after self-calibration of the cameras, a 3D model can also be correctly augmented into this virtual environment synthesized by the tri-view morphing algorithm. We have applied our view morphing framework to several interesting applications: 4D video synthesis, automatic target recognition, multi-view morphing.

/projects/triview/index.htm

Keywords: Wide baseline matching, motion segmentation, view morphing, multiple view geometry, video synthesis.


Educational career:
B.E. 1994, Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Beijing, P.R.China
M.E. 1997, Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Beijing, P.R.China
M.S. 2002, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL


Committee in charge:
Dr. Niels da Vitoria Lobo
Dr. Sumanta Pattanaik
Dr. Jannick P. Rolland
Dr. Mubarak Shah

Approved for distribution by Dr. Mubarak Shah, Committee Chair, October 20, 2004.

The public is welcome to attend.