• Media type: Electronic Thesis; Doctoral Thesis; E-Book
  • Title: Interactive 3D Reconstruction ; Interaktive 3D-Rekonstruktion
  • Contributor: Schöning, Julius [Author]
  • imprint: Universität Osnabrück: osnaDocs, 2018-05-23
  • Language: English
  • Keywords: 42.30.Tz - Computer vision ; object annotation ; 3D-Rekonstruktion ; I.4.6 - Segmentation ; 07.05.Wr - Computer interfaces ; human-machine-interaction ; I.4.5 - Reconstruction ; Maschinelles Sehen ; 3D reconstruction ; 54.74 - Maschinelles Sehen ; 54.72 - Künstliche Intelligenz ; computer vision ; robotic vision ; CAD-ready ; I.2.10 - Vision and Scene Understanding ; user in the loop
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  • Description: Applicable image-based reconstruction of three-dimensional (3D) objects offers many interesting industrial as well as private use cases, such as augmented reality, reverse engineering, 3D printing and simulation tasks. Unfortunately, image-based 3D reconstruction is not yet applicable to these quite complex tasks, since the resulting 3D models are single, monolithic objects without any division into logical or functional subparts. This thesis aims at making image-based 3D reconstruction feasible such that captures of standard cameras can be used for creating functional 3D models. The research presented in the following does not focus on the fine-tuning of algorithms to achieve minor improvements, but evaluates the entire processing pipeline of image-based 3D reconstruction and tries to contribute at four critical points, where significant improvement can be achieved by advanced human-computer interaction: (i) As the starting point of any 3D reconstruction process, the object of interest (OOI) that should be reconstructed needs to be annotated. For this task, novel pixel-accurate OOI annotation as an interactive process is presented, and an appropriate software solution is released. (ii) To improve the interactive annotation process, traditional interface devices, like mouse and keyboard, are supplemented with human sensory data to achieve closer user interaction. (iii) In practice, a major obstacle is the so far missing standard for file formats for annotation, which leads to numerous proprietary solutions. Therefore, a uniform standard file format is implemented and used for prototyping the first gaze-improved computer vision algorithms. As a sideline of this research, analogies between the close interaction of humans and computer vision systems and 3D perception are identified and evaluated. (iv) Finally, to reduce the processing time of the underlying algorithms used for 3D reconstruction, the ability of artificial neural networks to reconstruct 3D models of unknown OOIs is investigated. Summarizing, the ...
  • Access State: Open Access