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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

3D feature extraction from a single 2D image

Hong, Qi He January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
2

Research and Development of Applying Vision guided Position Control by a Flexible Circuits with Automatic Drill Equipments

Liu, Yi-Te 26 July 2001 (has links)
Flexible printed circuits (FPCs) have a flexible character, so the topic for high accuracy and speed of drill is important. We will create an automatic system that joins vision-guided function to accomplish the challenge object of high quality and low cost. The system must contain two sub-systems, which are the machine position control and the image recognition. The machine position control system basis framework moves to position after getting hole-position with different methods and scheme of trajectory planning. The image recognition system framework exports correction to machine position control system that integrates the technique of charge-coupled device (CCD), light source design, snap an image in region of interest (ROI) with image grabber card, pattern match that uses normalized cross correlation (NCC) algorithm. We can proof that the system can achieve the expected goal of high speed and accuracy of drill.
3

Robot visual servoing with iterative learning control

Jiang, Ping, Unbehauen, R. January 2002 (has links)
Yes / This paper presents an iterative learning scheme for vision guided robot trajectory tracking. At first, a stability criterion for designing iterative learning controller is proposed. It can be used for a system with initial resetting error. By using the criterion, one can convert the design problem into finding a positive definite discrete matrix kernel and a more general form of learning control can be obtained. Then, a three-dimensional (3-D) trajectory tracking system with a single static camera to realize robot movement imitation is presented based on this criterion.
4

An Onboard Vision System for Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Guidance

Edwards, Barrett Bruce 17 November 2010 (has links) (PDF)
The viability of small Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) as a stable platform for specific application use has been significantly advanced in recent years. Initial focus of lightweight UAV development was to create a craft capable of stable and controllable flight. This is largely a solved problem. Currently, the field has progressed to the point that unmanned aircraft can be carried in a backpack, launched by hand, weigh only a few pounds and be capable of navigating through unrestricted airspace. The most basic use of a UAV is to visually observe the environment and use that information to influence decision making. Previous attempts at using visual information to control a small UAV used an off-board approach where the video stream from an onboard camera was transmitted down to a ground station for processing and decision making. These attempts achieved limited results as the two-way transmission time introduced unacceptable amounts of latency into time-sensitive control algorithms. Onboard image processing offers a low-latency solution that will avoid the negative effects of two-way communication to a ground station. The first part of this thesis will show that onboard visual processing is capable of meeting the real-time control demands of an autonomous vehicle, which will also include the evaluation of potential onboard computing platforms. FPGA-based image processing will be shown to be the ideal technology for lightweight unmanned aircraft. The second part of this thesis will focus on the exact onboard vision system implementation for two proof-of-concept applications. The first application describes the use of machine vision algorithms to locate and track a target landing site for a UAV. GPS guidance was insufficient for this task. A vision system was utilized to localize the target site during approach and provide course correction updates to the UAV. The second application describes a feature detection and tracking sub-system that can be used in higher level application algorithms.

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