Jose Lamarca

2papers

2 Papers

CVSep 15, 2021
Direct and Sparse Deformable Tracking

Jose Lamarca, Juan J. Gomez Rodriguez, Juan D. Tardos et al.

Deformable Monocular SLAM algorithms recover the localization of a camera in an unknown deformable environment. Current approaches use a template-based deformable tracking to recover the camera pose and the deformation of the map. These template-based methods use an underlying global deformation model. In this paper, we introduce a novel deformable camera tracking method with a local deformation model for each point. Each map point is defined as a single textured surfel that moves independently of the other map points. Thanks to a direct photometric error cost function, we can track the position and orientation of the surfel without an explicit global deformation model. In our experiments, we validate the proposed system and observe that our local deformation model estimates more accurately and robustly the targeted deformations of the map in both laboratory-controlled experiments and in-body scenarios undergoing non-isometric deformations, with changing topology or discontinuities.

CVAug 20, 2019
DefSLAM: Tracking and Mapping of Deforming Scenes from Monocular Sequences

Jose Lamarca, Shaifali Parashar, Adrien Bartoli et al.

Monocular SLAM algorithms perform robustly when observing rigid scenes, however, they fail when the observed scene deforms, for example, in medical endoscopy applications. We present DefSLAM, the first monocular SLAM capable of operating in deforming scenes in real-time. Our approach intertwines Shape-from-Template (SfT) and Non-Rigid Structure-from-Motion (NRSfM) techniques to deal with the exploratory sequences typical of SLAM. A deformation tracking thread recovers the pose of the camera and the deformation of the observed map, at frame rate, by means of SfT processing a template that models the scene shape-at-rest. A deformation mapping thread runs in parallel with the tracking to update the template, at keyframe rate, by means of an isometric NRSfM processing a batch of full perspective keyframes. In our experiments, DefSLAM processes close-up sequences of deforming scenes, both in a laboratory controlled experiment and in medical endoscopy sequences, producing accurate 3D models of the scene with respect to the moving camera.