Serviceeinschränkungen vom 12.-22.02.2026 - weitere Infos auf der UB-Homepage

Treffer: Numerical Reflectance Compensation for Non-Lambertian Photometric Stereo.

Title:
Numerical Reflectance Compensation for Non-Lambertian Photometric Stereo.
Authors:
Source:
IEEE transactions on image processing : a publication of the IEEE Signal Processing Society [IEEE Trans Image Process] 2019 Jul; Vol. 28 (7), pp. 3177-3191. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Jan 24.
Publication Type:
Journal Article
Language:
English
Journal Info:
Publisher: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Country of Publication: United States NLM ID: 9886191 Publication Model: Print-Electronic Cited Medium: Internet ISSN: 1941-0042 (Electronic) Linking ISSN: 10577149 NLM ISO Abbreviation: IEEE Trans Image Process Subsets: PubMed not MEDLINE
Imprint Name(s):
Original Publication: New York, NY : Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, 1992-
Entry Date(s):
Date Created: 20190125 Latest Revision: 20191120
Update Code:
20250114
DOI:
10.1109/TIP.2019.2894963
PMID:
30676961
Database:
MEDLINE

Weitere Informationen

The surface normal estimation from photometric stereo becomes less reliable when the surface reflectance deviates from the Lambertian assumption. The non-Lambertian effect can be explicitly addressed by physics modeling to the reflectance function, at the cost of introducing highly nonlinear optimization. This paper proposes a numerical compensation scheme that attempts to minimize the angular error to address the non-Lambertian photometric stereo problem. Due to the multifaceted influence in the modeling of non-Lambertian reflectance in photometric stereo, directly minimizing the angular errors of surface normal is a highly complex problem. We introduce an alternating strategy, in which the estimated reflectance can be temporarily regarded as a known variable, to simplify the formulation of angular error. To reduce the impact of inaccurately estimated reflectance in this simplification, we propose a numerical compensation scheme whose compensation weight is formulated to reflect the reliability of estimated reflectance. Finally, the solution for the proposed numerical compensation scheme is efficiently computed by using cosine difference to approximate the angular difference. The experimental results show that our method can significantly improve the performance of the state-of-the-art methods on both synthetic data and real data with small additive costs. Moreover, our method initialized by results from the baseline method (least-square-based) achieves the state-of-the-art performance on both synthetic data and real data with significantly smaller overall computation, i.e., about eight times faster compared with the state-of-the-art methods.