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On 3D Mosaicing of Rotationally Symmetric Ceramic Fragments
Cambridge UK August 23-August 26
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ICPR.2004.133415717th International Conference on Patt ...
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Martin Kampel, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Robert Sablatnig, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
A major obstacle to the wider use of 3D object reconstruction and modeling is the extent of manual intervention needed. Such interventions are currently massive and exist throughout every phase of a 3D reconstruction project: collection of images, image management, establishment of sensor position and image orientation, extracting the geometric detail describing an object, merging geometric, texture and semantic data. This work aims to develop a solution for automated documentation of archaeological pottery, which also leads to a more complete 3D model out of multiple fragments. Generally the 3D reconstruction of arbitrary objects from their fragments can be regarded as a 3D puzzle. In order to solve it we identified the following main tasks: 3D data acquisition, orientation of the object, classification of the object and reconstruction.We demonstrate the method and give results on synthetic and real data.
Citation:
Martin Kampel, Robert Sablatnig, "On 3D Mosaicing of Rotationally Symmetric Ceramic Fragments," icpr, vol. 2, pp.265-268, 17th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR'04) - Volume 2, 2004
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