Preparation of Papers for the WCECS 2008 (22-24 October, 2008)
release_chq2bfazrnghznvauey4szsw3i
by
John Smith
Abstract
Motion tracking and object recognition often use cameras that are mounted in motion platforms like pan-tilt units, linear tables and even robots. Tracking can be automated by visually servoing the platform's degrees-of-freedom (DOF) thus keeping the camera's point-of-view directed at the target. Tracking quick moving targets often demands faster bandwidth platforms. However biology suggests a redundant approach where DOF, like the eye and head, cooperate to direct vision systems and overcome joint limits. This paper illustrates the effectiveness of this concept using a robot-mounted camera.
In text/plain
format
Archived Files and Locations
application/pdf
102.6 kB
file_oryhhik5jnb6lhwhfc5csmyphi
|
web.archive.org (webarchive) www.iaeng.org (web) |
article-journal
Stage
unknown
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)