Abstract
The naturalness of warps is gaining extensive attention in image stitching. Recent warps, such as SPHP and AANAP, use global similarity warps to mitigate projective distortion (which enlarges regions); however, they necessarily bring in perspective distortion (which generates inconsistencies). In this paper, we propose a novel quasi-homography warp, which effectively balances the perspective distortion against the projective distortion in the non-overlapping region to create a more natural-looking panorama. Our approach formulates the warp as the solution of a bivariate system, where perspective distortion and projective distortion are characterized as slope preservation and scale linearization, respectively. Because our proposed warp only relies on a global homography, it is thus totally parameter free. A comprehensive experiment shows that a quasi-homography warp outperforms some state-of-the-art warps in urban scenes, including homography, AutoStitch and SPHP. A user study demonstrates that it wins most users' favor, compared to homography and SPHP.
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