Paper
9 September 2019 Occlusion-based computational periscopy with consumer cameras
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The ability to form images of scenes hidden from direct view would be advantageous in many applications – from improved motion planning and collision avoidance in autonomous navigation to enhanced danger anticipation for first-responders in search-and-rescue missions. Recent techniques for imaging around corners have mostly relied on time-of-flight measurements of light propagation, necessitating the use of expensive, specialized optical systems. In this work, we demonstrate how to form images of hidden scenes from intensity-only measurements of the light reaching a visible surface from the hidden scene. Our approach exploits the penumbra cast by an opaque occluding object onto a visible surface. Specifically, we present a physical model that relates the measured photograph to the radiosity of the hidden scene and the visibility function due to the opaque occluder. For a given scene–occluder setup, we characterize the parts of the hidden region for which the physical model is well-conditioned for inversion – i.e., the computational field of view (CFOV) of the imaging system. This concept of CFOV is further verified through the Cram´er–Rao bound of the hidden-scene estimation problem. Finally, we present a two-step computational method for recovering the occluder and the scene behind it. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method using both synthetic and experimentally measured data.
© (2019) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
John Murray-Bruce, Charles Saunders, and Vivek K. Goyal "Occlusion-based computational periscopy with consumer cameras", Proc. SPIE 11138, Wavelets and Sparsity XVIII, 111380X (9 September 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2528322
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Photography

Non-line-of-sight propagation

Image resolution

Imaging systems

RGB color model

Light sources

Opacity

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