CVJun 23, 2016

3D Display Calibration by Visual Pattern Analysis

arXiv:1606.07166v19 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses calibration issues for 3D display manufacturers and users, offering an incremental improvement over existing methods.

The paper tackles the problem of misaligned optical elements in 3D displays causing distorted images by proposing a calibration method using visual pattern analysis, achieving about a half order of magnitude higher accuracy than prior work, with computation under 2 seconds and robustness down to 6 dB SNR.

Nearly all 3D displays need calibration for correct rendering. More often than not, the optical elements in a 3D display are misaligned from the designed parameter setting. As a result, 3D magic does not perform well as intended. The observed images tend to get distorted. In this paper, we propose a novel display calibration method to fix the situation. In our method, a pattern image is displayed on the panel and a camera takes its pictures twice at different positions. Then, based on a quantitative model, we extract all display parameters (i.e., pitch, slanted angle, gap or thickness, offset) from the observed patterns in the captured images. For high accuracy and robustness, our method analyzes the patterns mostly in frequency domain. We conduct two types of experiments for validation; one with optical simulation for quantitative results and the other with real-life displays for qualitative assessment. Experimental results demonstrate that our method is quite accurate, about a half order of magnitude higher than prior work; is efficient, spending less than 2 s for computation; and is robust to noise, working well in the SNR regime as low as 6 dB.

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