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A Survey of Photometric Stereo Techniques
Author(s): Jens Ackermann;Michael Goesele
Source: Journal:Foundations and Trends® in Computer Graphics and Vision ISSN Print:1572-2740, ISSN Online:1572-2759 Publisher:Now Publishers Volume 9 Number 3-4, Pages: 109(149-254) DOI: 10.1561/0600000065
Abstract:
Reconstructing the shape of an object from images is an important problem in computer vision that has led to a variety of solution strategies.
This survey covers photometric stereo, i.e., techniques that exploit the observed intensity variations caused by illumination changes to recover
the orientation of the surface. In the most basic setting, a diffuse surface is illuminated from at least three directions and captured with a static
camera. Under some conditions, this allows to recover per-pixel surface normals. Modern approaches generalize photometric stereo in various ways, e.g.,
relaxing constraints on lighting, surface reflectance and camera placement or creating different types of local surface estimates. Starting with an
introduction for readers unfamiliar with the subject, we discuss the foundations of this field of research. We then summarize important trends and
developments that emerged in the last three decades. We put a focus on approaches with the potential to be applied in a broad range of scenarios.
This implies, e.g., simple capture setups, relaxed model assumptions, and increased robustness requirements. The goal of this review is to provide an
overview of the diverse concepts and ideas on the way towards more general techniques than traditional photometric stereo.
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