Rogerio Feris, Lisa M. Brown, et al.
ICPR 2014
Traditional stereo matching algorithms are limited in their ability to produce accurate results near depth discontinuities, due to partial occlusions and violation of smoothness constraints. In this paper, we use small baseline multi-flash illumination to produce a rich set of feature maps that enable acquisition of discontinuity preserving point correspondences. First, from a single multi-flash camera, we formulate a qualitative depth map using a gradient domain method that encodes object relative distances. Then, in a multiview setup, we exploit shadows created by light sources to compute an occlusion map. Finally, we demonstrate the usefulness of these feature maps by incorporating them into two different dense stereo correspondence algorithms, the first based on local search and the second based on belief propagation. Experimental results show that our enhanced stereo algorithms are able to extract high quality, discontinuity preserving correspondence maps from scenes that are extremely challenging for conventional stereo methods. We also demonstrate that small baseline illumination can be useful to handle specular reflections in stereo imagery. Different from most existing active illumination techniques, our method is simple, inexpensive, compact, and requires no calibration of light sources. © 2008 IEEE.
Rogerio Feris, Lisa M. Brown, et al.
ICPR 2014
Fahiem Bacchus, Joseph Y. Halpern, et al.
IJCAI 1995
Vijay K. Naik, Sanjeev K. Setia, et al.
Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing
Yidi Wu, Thomas Bohnstingl, et al.
ICML 2025