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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Three-Dimensional Hand Tracking and Surface-Geometry Measurement for a Robot-Vision System

Liu, Chris Yu-Liang 17 January 2009 (has links)
Tracking of human motion and object identification and recognition are important in many applications including motion capture for human-machine interaction systems. This research is part of a global project to enable a service robot to recognize new objects and perform different object-related tasks based on task guidance and demonstration provided by a general user. This research consists of the calibration and testing of two vision systems which are part of a robot-vision system. First, real-time tracking of a human hand is achieved using images acquired from three calibrated synchronized cameras. Hand pose is determined from the positions of physical markers and input to the robot system in real-time. Second, a multi-line laser camera range sensor is designed, calibrated, and mounted on a robot end-effector to provide three-dimensional (3D) geometry information about objects in the robot environment. The laser-camera sensor includes two cameras to provide stereo vision. For the 3D hand tracking, a novel score-based hand tracking scheme is presented employing dynamic multi-threshold marker detection, a stereo camera-pair utilization scheme, marker matching and labeling using epipolar geometry and hand pose axis analysis, to enable real-time hand tracking under occlusion and non-uniform lighting environments. For surface-geometry measurement using the multi-line laser range sensor, two different approaches are analyzed for two-dimensional (2D) to 3D coordinate mapping, using Bezier surface fitting and neural networks, respectively. The neural-network approach was found to be a more viable approach for surface-geometry measurement worth future exploration for its lower magnitude of 3D reconstruction error and consistency over different regions of the object space.
2

Three-Dimensional Hand Tracking and Surface-Geometry Measurement for a Robot-Vision System

Liu, Chris Yu-Liang 17 January 2009 (has links)
Tracking of human motion and object identification and recognition are important in many applications including motion capture for human-machine interaction systems. This research is part of a global project to enable a service robot to recognize new objects and perform different object-related tasks based on task guidance and demonstration provided by a general user. This research consists of the calibration and testing of two vision systems which are part of a robot-vision system. First, real-time tracking of a human hand is achieved using images acquired from three calibrated synchronized cameras. Hand pose is determined from the positions of physical markers and input to the robot system in real-time. Second, a multi-line laser camera range sensor is designed, calibrated, and mounted on a robot end-effector to provide three-dimensional (3D) geometry information about objects in the robot environment. The laser-camera sensor includes two cameras to provide stereo vision. For the 3D hand tracking, a novel score-based hand tracking scheme is presented employing dynamic multi-threshold marker detection, a stereo camera-pair utilization scheme, marker matching and labeling using epipolar geometry and hand pose axis analysis, to enable real-time hand tracking under occlusion and non-uniform lighting environments. For surface-geometry measurement using the multi-line laser range sensor, two different approaches are analyzed for two-dimensional (2D) to 3D coordinate mapping, using Bezier surface fitting and neural networks, respectively. The neural-network approach was found to be a more viable approach for surface-geometry measurement worth future exploration for its lower magnitude of 3D reconstruction error and consistency over different regions of the object space.

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