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Key characteristics of specular stereo.


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Authors

Muryy, Alexander A 
Fleming, Roland W 
Welchman, Andrew E 

Abstract

Because specular reflection is view-dependent, shiny surfaces behave radically differently from matte, textured surfaces when viewed with two eyes. As a result, specular reflections pose substantial problems for binocular stereopsis. Here we use a combination of computer graphics and geometrical analysis to characterize the key respects in which specular stereo differs from standard stereo, to identify how and why the human visual system fails to reconstruct depths correctly from specular reflections. We describe rendering of stereoscopic images of specular surfaces in which the disparity information can be varied parametrically and independently of monocular appearance. Using the generated surfaces and images, we explain how stereo correspondence can be established with known and unknown surface geometry. We show that even with known geometry, stereo matching for specular surfaces is nontrivial because points in one eye may have zero, one, or multiple matches in the other eye. Matching features typically yield skew (nonintersecting) rays, leading to substantial ortho-epipolar components to the disparities, which makes deriving depth values from matches nontrivial. We suggest that the human visual system may base its depth estimates solely on the epipolar components of disparities while treating the ortho-epipolar components as a measure of the underlying reliability of the disparity signals. Reconstructing virtual surfaces according to these principles reveals that they are piece-wise smooth with very large discontinuities close to inflection points on the physical surface. Together, these distinctive characteristics lead to cues that the visual system could use to diagnose specular reflections from binocular information.

Description

Keywords

binocular vision, correspondence problem, matching, material perception, specularity, stereopsis, Cues, Depth Perception, Humans, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Reproducibility of Results, Vision Disparity, Vision, Binocular

Journal Title

J Vis

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1534-7362
1534-7362

Volume Title

14

Publisher

Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (095183/Z/10/Z)
European Commission (316746)
The work was funded by the Wellcome Trust (grants 08459/Z/07/Z & 095183/Z/10/Z) and the EU Marie Curie Initial Training Network “PRISM” (FP7-PEOPLE-2012-ITN, Agreement: 316746).