A Projective Framework for Radiometric Image Analysis
Abstract
Different materials reflect light in different ways,
and reflectance interacts with shape, lighting, and viewpoint to
determine an object's image. Common materials exhibit diverse
reflectance effects, and this is a significant source of difficulty
for radiometric image analysis. One strategy for dealing with this
diversity is to build computational tools that exploit reflectance
symmetries, such as reciprocity and isotropy, that are exhibited by
broad classes of materials. In this paper, we advocate the real
projective plane as a tool for representing and exploiting these
symmetries. In this approach, each point in the plane represents a
surface normal that is visible from a fixed viewpoint, and
reflectance symmetries are analyzed in terms of the geometric
structures that they induce. We provide an overview of these
structures and explore applications to both calibrated and
un-calibrated photometric stereo.
BibTex entry
@proceedings { 237,
title = {A Projective Framework for Radiometric Image Analysis},
year = {2009},
month = {20/06/2009},
author = {Ping Tan and Todd Zickler}
}