Abstract

A better understanding of photometry in laparoscopic images can increase the reliability of computer-assisted surgery applications. Photometry requires modelling illumination, tissue reflectance and camera response. There exists a large variety of light models, but no systematic and reproducible evaluation. We present a review of light models in laparoscopic surgery, a unified calibration approach, an evaluation methodology, and a practical use of photometry. We use images of a calibration checkerboard to calibrate the light models. We then use these models in a proposed dense stereo algorithm exploiting the shading and simultaneously extracting the tissue albedo, which we call dense shading stereo. The approach works with a broad range of light models, giving us a way to test their respective merits. We show that overly complex light models are usually not needed and that the light source position must be calibrated. We also show that dense shading stereo outperforms existing methods, in terms of both geometric and photometric errors, and achieves sub-millimeter accuracy. This work demonstrates the importance of careful light modelling and calibration for computer-assisted surgical applications. It gives guidelines on choosing the best performing light model.

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