by Csaba Domokos, Zoltan Kato
Abstract:
We propose a novel approach for the estimation of 2D affine transformations aligning a planar shape and its distorted observation. The exact transformation is obtained as a least-squares solution of a linear system of equations constructed by fitting Gaussian densities to the shapes which preserve the effect of the unknown transformation. In the case of compound shapes, we also propose a robust and efficient numerical scheme achieving near real-time performance. The method has been tested on synthetic as well as on real images. Its robustness in the case of segmentation errors, missing data, and modelling error has also been demonstrated. The proposed method does not require point correspondences nor the solution of complex optimization problems, has linear time complexity and provides an exact solution regardless of the magnitude of deformation.
Reference:
Csaba Domokos, Zoltan Kato, Affine Shape Alignment Using Covariant Gaussian Densities: A Direct Solution, In Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision, volume 51, no. 3, pp. 385-399, 2015.
Bibtex Entry:
@string{jmiv="Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision"}
@Article{Domokos-Kato2015,
author = {Csaba Domokos and Zoltan Kato},
title = {Affine Shape Alignment Using Covariant Gaussian
Densities: A Direct Solution},
journal = jmiv,
year = 2015,
volume = 51,
number = 3,
pages = {385-399},
month = mar,
abstract = {We propose a novel approach for the estimation of 2D
affine transformations aligning a planar shape and
its distorted observation. The exact transformation
is obtained as a least-squares solution of a linear
system of equations constructed by fitting Gaussian
densities to the shapes which preserve the effect of
the unknown transformation. In the case of compound
shapes, we also propose a robust and efficient
numerical scheme achieving near real-time
performance. The method has been tested on synthetic
as well as on real images. Its robustness in the
case of segmentation errors, missing data, and
modelling error has also been demonstrated. The
proposed method does not require point
correspondences nor the solution of complex
optimization problems, has linear time complexity
and provides an exact solution regardless of the
magnitude of deformation. }
}