Skip to main content

Depth from shading, defocus, and correspondence using light-field angular coherence

Author(s): Tao, MW; Srinivasan, PP; Malik, J; Rusinkiewicz, Syzmon; Ramamoorthi, R

Download
To refer to this page use: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/pr1jh4k
Abstract: Light-field cameras are now used in consumer and industrial applications. Recent papers and products have demonstrated practical depth recovery algorithms from a passive single-shot capture. However, current light-field capture devices have narrow baselines and constrained spatial resolution; therefore, the accuracy of depth recovery is limited, requiring heavy regularization and producing planar depths that do not resemble the actual geometry. Using shading information is essential to improve the shape estimation. We develop an improved technique for local shape estimation from defocus and correspondence cues, and show how shading can be used to further refine the depth. Light-field cameras are able to capture both spatial and angular data, suitable for refocusing. By locally refocusing each spatial pixel to its respective estimated depth, we produce an all-in-focus image where all viewpoints converge onto a point in the scene. Therefore, the angular pixels have angular coherence, which exhibits three properties: photo consistency, depth consistency, and shading consistency. We propose a new framework that uses angular coherence to optimize depth and shading. The optimization framework estimates both general lighting in natural scenes and shading to improve depth regularization. Our method outperforms current state-of-the-art light-field depth estimation algorithms in multiple scenarios, including real images.
Publication Date: 15-Oct-2015
Electronic Publication Date: 2015
Citation: Tao, MW, Srinivasan, PP, Malik, J, Rusinkiewicz, S, Ramamoorthi, R. (2015). Depth from shading, defocus, and correspondence using light-field angular coherence. 07-12-June-2015 (1940 - 1948. doi:10.1109/CVPR.2015.7298804
DOI: doi:10.1109/CVPR.2015.7298804
Pages: 1940 - 1948
Type of Material: Conference Article
Journal/Proceeding Title: Proceedings of the IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Version: Final published version. This is an open access article.



Items in OAR@Princeton are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.