4.8 Article

Non-Rigid Shape From Water

Journal

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TPAMI.2021.3075450

Keywords

Three-dimensional displays; Shape; Cameras; Image reconstruction; Absorption; Surface reconstruction; Imaging; Computational photography; underwater 3D shape recovery; non-rigid reconstruction; near-infrared light; camera calibration

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [17K20143, 18K19815, 20H05951, 21H04893]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17K20143, 18K19815, 20H05951, 21H04893] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The study introduces a novel method for recovering consistent, dense 3D shapes of dynamic, non-rigid objects in water. It utilizes underwater 3D scene flow estimation and depth estimates from near-infrared observations to reconstruct shapes. The results demonstrate the effectiveness of the method in recovering complete shapes of non-rigid objects in water.
We introduce a novel 3D sensing method for recovering a consistent, dense 3D shape of a dynamic, non-rigid object in water. The method reconstructs a complete (or fuller) 3D surface of the target object in a canonical frame (e.g., rest shape) as it freely deforms and moves between frames by estimating underwater 3D scene flow and using it to integrate per-frame depth estimates recovered from two near-infrared observations. The reconstructed shape is refined in the course of this global non-rigid shape recovery by leveraging both geometric and radiometric constraints. We implement our method with a single camera and a light source without the orthographic assumption on either by deriving a practical calibration method that estimates the point source position with respect to the camera. Our reconstruction method also accounts for scattering by water. We prototype a video-rate imaging system and show 3D shape reconstruction results on a number of real-world static, deformable, and dynamic objects and creatures in real-world water. The results demonstrate the effectiveness of the method in recovering complete shapes of complex, non-rigid objects in water, which opens new avenues of application for underwater 3D sensing in the sub-meter range.

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