27
0

A Novel Method to Improve Quality Surface Coverage in Multi-View Capture

Abstract

The depth of field of a camera is a limiting factor for applications that require taking images at a short subject-to-camera distance or using a large focal length, such as total body photography, archaeology, and other close-range photogrammetry applications. Furthermore, in multi-view capture, where the target is larger than the camera's field of view, an efficient way to optimize surface coverage captured with quality remains a challenge. Given the 3D mesh of the target object and camera poses, we propose a novel method to derive a focus distance for each camera that optimizes the quality of the covered surface area. We first design an Expectation-Minimization (EM) algorithm to assign points on the mesh uniquely to cameras and then solve for a focus distance for each camera given the associated point set. We further improve the quality surface coverage by proposing a kk-view algorithm that solves for the points assignment and focus distances by considering multiple views simultaneously. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method under various simulations for total body photography. The EM and kk-view algorithms improve the relative cost of the baseline single-view methods by at least 2424% and 2828% respectively, corresponding to increasing the in-focus surface area by roughly 15501550 cm2^2 and 17801780 cm2^2. We believe the algorithms can be useful in a number of vision applications that require photogrammetric details but are limited by the depth of field.

View on arXiv
Comments on this paper