Hidden Valley , PA Very Fast 3-D Sensing Hardware

This paper describes two fast range sensing systems that are being developed at the RobottcS Institute of Carnegie MelIon. The first system is a passive video-rate stereo machine, based on the multi-baseline stereo theory, whose expected performance will exceed that of existing stereo methods or mediumto-short distance scanninglaser range Ande rsin most categories: high throughput (l.% Million pointdsecond), frame rate (30 framedsec), low latency Oess than 2 msec after imaging), dense depth map (256x250, and high precision (7 bit) m’th uncertainty estimation. Another system is an active laser range-image sensor that acquires a complete 28 x 32 range frame in as little as one millisecond. Using VLSI, sensing and processing are combined into a unique sensing element that measures range in a fully-parallel fashion. gones: high throughput (1.96 Million points/second), frame rate (30 franes/sec), low latency (less than 2 msec after imging), dense depth map (256x256). and high precision (7 bit) with uncertainty estimation. Another system is an active laser range-image sensor that acquires a complete 28 x 32 range frame in as little as one millisecond. Using VLSI, sensing and processing are combined into a unique sensing element that measures range in a fully-parallel fashion. While one is passive and the other is active, both systems achieve the high performance by taking advantage of local parallelism which can be mapped into hardware. The following two sections will describe the current state of our development effort.

[1]  Takeo Kanade,et al.  A VISI Smart Sensor For Fast Range Imaging , 1992, Proceedings of the IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems.

[2]  Yukio Sato,et al.  High Speed Rangefinder , 1988, Other Conferences.

[3]  Jon A. Webb Implementation and performance of fast parallel multi-baseline stereo vision , 1993, 1993 Computer Architectures for Machine Perception.

[4]  Takeo Kanade,et al.  Real-time 3-D pose estimation using a high-speed range sensor , 1993, Proceedings of the 1994 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation.

[5]  Ali E. Kayaalp,et al.  A Pipeline Architecture For Near Real-Time Stereo Range Detection , 1989, Other Conferences.

[6]  Takeo Kanade,et al.  A multiple-baseline stereo , 1991, Proceedings. 1991 IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition.