Theses and Dissertations
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- Creators: Turaga, Pavan
Description
Non-line-of-sight (NLOS) imaging of objects not visible to either the camera or illumina-
tion source is a challenging task with vital applications including surveillance and robotics.
Recent NLOS reconstruction advances have been achieved using time-resolved measure-
ments. Acquiring these time-resolved measurements requires expensive and specialized
detectors and laser sources. In work proposes a data-driven approach for NLOS 3D local-
ization requiring only a conventional camera and projector. The localisation is performed
using a voxelisation and a regression problem. Accuracy of greater than 90% is achieved
in localizing a NLOS object to a 5cm × 5cm × 5cm volume in real data. By adopting
the regression approach an object of width 10cm to localised to approximately 1.5cm. To
generalize to line-of-sight (LOS) scenes with non-planar surfaces, an adaptive lighting al-
gorithm is adopted. This algorithm, based on radiosity, identifies and illuminates scene
patches in the LOS which most contribute to the NLOS light paths, and can factor in sys-
tem power constraints. Improvements ranging from 6%-15% in accuracy with a non-planar
LOS wall using adaptive lighting is reported, demonstrating the advantage of combining
the physics of light transport with active illumination for data-driven NLOS imaging.
tion source is a challenging task with vital applications including surveillance and robotics.
Recent NLOS reconstruction advances have been achieved using time-resolved measure-
ments. Acquiring these time-resolved measurements requires expensive and specialized
detectors and laser sources. In work proposes a data-driven approach for NLOS 3D local-
ization requiring only a conventional camera and projector. The localisation is performed
using a voxelisation and a regression problem. Accuracy of greater than 90% is achieved
in localizing a NLOS object to a 5cm × 5cm × 5cm volume in real data. By adopting
the regression approach an object of width 10cm to localised to approximately 1.5cm. To
generalize to line-of-sight (LOS) scenes with non-planar surfaces, an adaptive lighting al-
gorithm is adopted. This algorithm, based on radiosity, identifies and illuminates scene
patches in the LOS which most contribute to the NLOS light paths, and can factor in sys-
tem power constraints. Improvements ranging from 6%-15% in accuracy with a non-planar
LOS wall using adaptive lighting is reported, demonstrating the advantage of combining
the physics of light transport with active illumination for data-driven NLOS imaging.
ContributorsChandran, Sreenithy (Author) / Jayasuriya, Suren (Thesis advisor) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Dasarathy, Gautam (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
Recursive Bayesian Estimation on Projective Spaces: Theoretical Foundations and Practical Algorithms
Description
This thesis develops geometrically and statistically rigorous foundations for multivariate analysis and bayesian inference posed on grassmannian manifolds. Requisite to the development of key elements of statistical theory in a geometric realm are closed-form, analytic expressions for many differential geometric objects, e.g., tangent vectors, metrics, geodesics, volume forms. The first part of this thesis is devoted to a mathematical exposition of these. In particular, it leverages the classical work of Alan James to derive the exterior calculus of differential forms on special grassmannians for invariant measures with respect to which integration is permissible. Motivated by various multi-sensor remote sensing applications, the second part of this thesis describes the problem of recursively estimating the state of a dynamical system propagating on the Grassmann manifold. Fundamental to the bayesian treatment of this problem is the choice of a suitable probability distribution to a priori model the state. Using the Method of Maximum Entropy, a derivation of maximum-entropy probability distributions on the state space that uses the developed geometric theory is characterized. Statistical analyses of these distributions, including parameter estimation, are also presented. These probability distributions and the statistical analysis thereof are original contributions. Using the bayesian framework, two recursive estimation algorithms, both of which rely on noisy measurements on (special cases of) the Grassmann manifold, are the devised and implemented numerically. The first is applied to an idealized scenario, the second to a more practically motivated scenario. The novelty of both of these algorithms lies in the use of thederived maximumentropy probability measures as models for the priors. Numerical simulations demonstrate that, under mild assumptions, both estimation algorithms produce accurate and statistically meaningful outputs. This thesis aims to chart the interface between differential geometry and statistical signal processing. It is my deepest hope that the geometric-statistical approach underlying this work facilitates and encourages the development of new theories and new computational methods in geometry. Application of these, in turn, will bring new insights and bettersolutions to a number of extant and emerging problems in signal processing.
ContributorsCrider, Lauren N (Author) / Cochran, Douglas (Thesis advisor) / Kotschwar, Brett (Committee member) / Scharf, Louis (Committee member) / Taylor, Thomas (Committee member) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
Description
In the rapidly evolving field of computer vision, propelled by advancements in deeplearning, the integration of hardware-software co-design has become crucial to overcome
the limitations of traditional imaging systems. This dissertation explores the integration
of hardware-software co-design in computational imaging, particularly in light transport
acquisition and Non-Line-of-Sight (NLOS) imaging. By leveraging projector-camera
systems and computational techniques, this thesis address critical challenges in imaging
complex environments, such as adverse weather conditions, low-light scenarios, and the
imaging of reflective or transparent objects.
The first contribution in this thesis is the theory, design, and implementation of a slope
disparity gating system, which is a vertically aligned configuration of a synchronized
raster scanning projector and rolling-shutter camera, facilitating selective imaging through
disparity-based triangulation. This system introduces a novel, hardware-oriented approach
to selective imaging, circumventing the limitations of post-capture processing.
The second contribution of this thesis is the realization of two innovative approaches
for spotlight optimization to improve localization and tracking for NLOS imaging. The
first approach utilizes radiosity-based optimization to improve 3D localization and object
identification for small-scale laboratory settings. The second approach introduces a learningbased
illumination network along with a differentiable renderer and NLOS estimation
network to optimize human 2D localization and activity recognition. This approach is
validated on a large, room-scale scene with complex line-of-sight geometries and occluders.
The third contribution of this thesis is an attention-based neural network for passive
NLOS settings where there is no controllable illumination. The thesis demonstrates realtime,
dynamic NLOS human tracking where the camera is moving on a mobile robotic platform. In addition, this thesis contains an appendix featuring temporally consistent
relighting for portrait videos with applications in computer graphics and vision.
ContributorsChandran, Sreenithy (Author) / Jayasuriya, Suren (Thesis advisor) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Dasarathy, Gautam (Committee member) / Kubo, Hiroyuki (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024