RESEARCHES
Smart Vision & Robotic Sensing
Professor, Robotics Laboratory
Smart Innovation Program, Graduate School of Advanced Science and Engineering
Hiroshima University
Smart Innovation Program, Graduate School of Advanced Science and Engineering
Hiroshima University
Idaku ISHII
- >> Research Contents
- In order to establish high-speed robot senses that are much faster than human senses, we are conducting research and development of information systems and devices that can achieve real-time image processing at 1000 frames/s or greater. As well as integrated algorithms to accelerate sensor information processing, we are also studying new sensing methodologies based on vibration and flow dynamics; they are too fast for humans to sense.
Self-Projected Structured Light Method for Fast Depth-Based Image Inspection
This research presents a self-projected structured light depth measurement system that can simultaneously inspect depth images at a high speed even when there are large height differences in the measured scene.
In our method, different shapes are acquired from a 3-D reference shape by processing multiple straight-stripe-like patterns projected in a camera view, which are projections of multiple curved-stripe patterns generated by the reference shape. Compared with straight-stripe projections in most structured light methods, the number of curved-stripe projections can be reduced using our method, which facilitates rapid processing and the acquisition of different 3-D shapes with little degradation accuracy when a 3-D shape in the background scene is provided as a reference. Using this method, we developed a structured light system that can acquire and process 512〜512 depth images in real time at 500 fps using a high-speed vision platform synchronized with a high-speed DLP projector.
We demonstrated its effectiveness in several experiments measured at 500 fps.
In our method, different shapes are acquired from a 3-D reference shape by processing multiple straight-stripe-like patterns projected in a camera view, which are projections of multiple curved-stripe patterns generated by the reference shape. Compared with straight-stripe projections in most structured light methods, the number of curved-stripe projections can be reduced using our method, which facilitates rapid processing and the acquisition of different 3-D shapes with little degradation accuracy when a 3-D shape in the background scene is provided as a reference. Using this method, we developed a structured light system that can acquire and process 512〜512 depth images in real time at 500 fps using a high-speed vision platform synchronized with a high-speed DLP projector.
We demonstrated its effectiveness in several experiments measured at 500 fps.
(a) depth video WMV movie(2.6M) |
(b) differential depth video WMV movie(2.6M) |
Reference
- Hao Gao, Tadayoshi Aoyama, Takeshi Takaki, and Idaku Ishii, A Self-projected Structured Light System for Fast Three-dimensional Shape Inspection, International Journal of Robotics and Automation, Vol.30, No.4, 206-4325 (2015)
- Jun Chen, Qingyi Gu, Tadayoshi Aoyama, Takeshi Takaki, and Idaku Ishii, A Fast 3D Shape Scanner Using Two HFR Camera-projector Systems, Proceedings of Advances In Robotics (AIR’15), doi: 10.1145/2783449.2783478, 2015
- Yongjiu Liu, Hao Gao, Qingyi Gu, Tadayoshi Aoyama, Takeshi Takaki, and Idaku Ishii, High-Frame-Rate Structured Light 3-D Vision for Fast Moving Objects, Journal of Robotics and Mechatronics, Vol.26 No.3, pp.311-320 (2014)
- Hao Gao, Tadayoshi Aoyama, Takeshi Takaki, and Idaku Ishii: Self-Projected Structured Light Method for Fast Depth-Based Image Inspection, Proceedings of the International Conference on Quality Control by Artificial Vision, pp.175-180, 2013.