Title: High-performance imaging using dense arrays of cameras
1Synthetic aperture confocal imaging
Marc Levoy Billy Chen Vaibhav Vaish
Mark Horowitz Ian McDowall Mark Bolas
2Outline
- technologies
- large camera arrays
- large projector arrays
- cameraprojector arrays
- optical effects
- synthetic aperture photography
- synthetic aperture illumination
- synthetic confocal imaging
3Stanford Multi-Camera ArrayWilburn 2002
- 640 480 pixels 30fps 128 cameras
- synchronized timing
- continuous video streaming
- flexible physical arrangement
4Ways to use large camera arrays
- widely spaced light field capture
- tightly packed high-performance imaging
- intermediate spacing synthetic aperture
photography
5Synthetic aperture photography
6Synthetic aperture photography
7Synthetic aperture photography
8Synthetic aperture photography
9Synthetic aperture photography
10Synthetic aperture photography
11Related work
- not like synthetic aperture radar (SAR)
- more like X-ray tomosynthesis
- Levoy and Hanrahan, 1996
- Isaksen, McMillan, Gortler, 2000
12Example using 45 cameras
13Synthetic pull-focus
14Crowd scene
15Crowd scene
16Synthetic aperture photographyusing an array of
mirrors
?
- 11-megapixel camera
- 22 planar mirrors
17 18 19Synthetic aperture illumation
20 Synthetic aperture illumation
- technologies
- array of projectors
- array of microprojectors
- single projector array of mirrors
- applications
- bright display
- autostereoscopic display Matusik 2004
- confocal imaging this paper
21Confocal scanning microscopy
22Confocal scanning microscopy
23Confocal scanning microscopy
light source
pinhole
pinhole
photocell
24Confocal scanning microscopy
light source
pinhole
pinhole
photocell
25UMIC SUNY/Stonybrook
26Synthetic confocal scanning
light source
27Synthetic confocal scanning
light source
28Synthetic confocal scanning
- works with any number of projectors 2
- discrimination degrades if point to left of
- no discrimination for points to left of
- slow!
- poor light efficiency
29Synthetic coded-apertureconfocal imaging
- different from coded aperture imaging in
astronomy - Wilson, Confocal Microscopy by Aperture
Correlation, 1996
30Synthetic coded-apertureconfocal imaging
31Synthetic coded-apertureconfocal imaging
32Synthetic coded-apertureconfocal imaging
33Synthetic coded-apertureconfocal imaging
100 trials ? 2 beams 50/100 trials 1
? 1 beam 50/100 trials 0.5
34Synthetic coded-apertureconfocal imaging
100 trials ? 2 beams 50/100 trials 1
? 1 beam 50/100 trials 0.5 floodlit
? 2 beams ? 2 beams trials ¼
floodlit ? 1 ¼ ( 2 ) 0.5 ? 0.5
¼ ( 2 ) 0
35Synthetic coded-apertureconfocal imaging
100 trials ? 2 beams 50/100 trials 1
? 1 beam 50/100 trials 0.5 floodlit
? 2 beams ? 2 beams trials ¼
floodlit ? 1 ¼ ( 2 ) 0.5 ? 0.5
¼ ( 2 ) 0
- 50 light efficiency
- any number of projectors 2
- no discrimination to left of
- works with relatively few trials (16)
36Synthetic coded-apertureconfocal imaging
100 trials ? 2 beams 50/100 trials 1
? 1 beam 50/100 trials 0.5 floodlit
? 2 beams ? 2 beams trials ¼
floodlit ? 1 ¼ ( 2 ) 0.5 ? 0.5
¼ ( 2 ) 0
- 50 light efficiency
- any number of projectors 2
- no discrimination to left of
- works with relatively few trials (16)
- needs patterns in which illumination of tiles are
uncorrelated
37Example pattern
38Patterns with less aliasing
39Implementation using an array of mirrors
40 41Confocal imaging in scattering media
- small tank
- too short for attenuation
- lit by internal reflections
42Experiments in a large water tank
50-foot flume at Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution (WHOI)
43Experiments in a large water tank
- 4-foot viewing distance to target
- surfaces blackened to kill reflections
- titanium dioxide in filtered water
- transmissometer to measure turbidity
44Experiments in a large water tank
- stray light limits performance
- one projector suffices if no occluders
45Seeing through turbid water
floodlit
scanned tile
46Application tounderwater exploration
Ballard/IFE 2004
47Research challenges in SAP and SAI
- theory
- aperture shapes and sampling patterns
- illumination patterns for confocal imaging
- optical design
- How to arrange cameras, projectors,lenses,
mirrors, and other optical elements? - How to compare the performance of different
arrangements (in foliage, underwater,...)?
48Challenges (continued)
- systems design
- multi-camera or multi-projector chips
- communication in camera-projector networks
- calibration in long-range or mobile settings
- algorithms
- tracking and stabilization of moving objects
- compression of dense multi-view imagery
- shape from light fields
49Challenges (continued)
- applications of confocal imaging
- remote sensing and surveillance
- shape measurement
- scientific imaging
- applications of shaped illumination
- shaped searchlights for surveillance
- shaped headlamps for driving in bad weather
- selective lighting of characters for stage and
screen
50Computational imagingin other fields
- medical imaging
- rebinning
- tomography
- airborne sensing
- multi-perspective panoramas
- synthetic aperture radar
- astronomy
- coded-aperture imaging
- multi-telescope imaging
51Computational imagingin other fields
- geophysics
- accoustic array imaging
- borehole tomography
- biology
- confocal microscopy
- deconvolution microscopy
- physics
- optical tomography
- inverse scattering
52The team
- staff
- Mark Horowitz
- Marc Levoy
- Bennett Wilburn
- students
- Billy Chen
- Vaibhav Vaish
- Katherine Chou
- Monica Goyal
- Neel Joshi
- Hsiao-Heng Kelin Lee
- Georg Petschnigg
- Guillaume Poncin
- Michael Smulski
- Augusto Roman
- collaborators
- Mark Bolas
- Ian McDowall
- Guillermo Sapiro
- funding
- Intel
- Sony
- Interval Research
- NSF
- DARPA
53Related papers
- The Light Field Video Camera
- Bennett Wilburn, Michael Smulski, Hsiao-Heng
Kelin Lee, and Mark Horowitz - Proc. Media Processors 2002, SPIE Electronic
Imaging 2002 - Using Plane Parallax for Calibrating Dense
Camera Arrays - Vaibhav Vaish, Bennett Wilburn, Neel Joshi,, Marc
Levoy - Proc. CVPR 2004
- High Speed Video Using a Dense Camera Array
- Bennett Wilburn, Neel Joshi, Vaibhav Vaish, Marc
Levoy, Mark Horowitz - Proc. CVPR 2004
- Spatiotemporal Sampling and Interpolation for
Dense Camera Arrays - Bennett Wilburn, Neel Joshi, Katherine Chou, Marc
Levoy, Mark Horowitz - ACM Transactions on Graphics (conditionally
accepted)
54http//graphics.stanford.edu/papers/confocal