Abstract

Abstract. Scene's 3D modelling, gesture recognition and motion tracking are fields in rapid and continuous development which have caused growing demand on interactivity in video-game and e-entertainment market. Starting from the idea of creating a sensor that allows users to play without having to hold any remote controller, the Microsoft Kinect device was created. The Kinect has always attract researchers in different fields, from robotics to Computer Vision (CV) and biomedical engineering as well as third-party communities that have released several Software Development Kit (SDK) versions for Kinect in order to use it not only as a game device but as measurement system. Microsoft Kinect Fusion control libraries (firstly released in March 2013) allow using the device as a 3D scanning and produce meshed polygonal of a static scene just moving the Kinect around. A drawback of this sensor is the geometric quality of the delivered data and the low repeatability. For this reason the authors carried out some investigation in order to evaluate the accuracy and repeatability of the depth measured delivered by the Kinect. The paper will present a throughout calibration analysis of the Kinect imaging sensor, with the aim of establishing the accuracy and precision of the delivered information: a straightforward calibration of the depth sensor in presented and then the 3D data are correct accordingly. Integrating the depth correction algorithm and correcting the IR camera interior and exterior orientation parameters, the Fusion Libraries are corrected and a new reconstruction software is created to produce more accurate models.

Highlights

  • Scene’s 3D modelling and motion tracking are sectors in continuous and quickly development

  • A drawback of this sensor is the geometric quality of the delivered 3D data and the low repeatability: for example, if one compares different subsequent frames acquired without moving the Kinect, it is frequent to have different measurements corresponding to the same pixel or even no-data information at all

  • Following these open research issues, the paper evaluates the accuracy and repeatability of the depth maps delivered by the Kinect sensor as well as the strength and weakness of Kinect

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Scene’s 3D modelling and motion tracking are sectors in continuous and quickly development. A drawback of this sensor is the geometric quality of the delivered 3D data and the low repeatability: for example, if one compares different subsequent frames acquired without moving the Kinect, it is frequent to have different measurements corresponding to the same pixel or even no-data information at all. Following these open research issues, the paper evaluates the accuracy and repeatability of the depth maps delivered by the Kinect sensor as well as the strength and weakness of Kinect.

The Microsoft Kinect sensor
RGB an IR camera calibration
Image sensors data analysis
Depth measurement accuracy
Kinect Fusion Libraries
Our software implementation
Laboratory scenario
Lego storage bricks
CONCLUSIONS
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