Absolute Pose Estimation from Line Correspondences using Direct Linear Transformation
This work addresses camera pose estimation for computer vision applications, offering an incremental improvement by combining existing DLT methods to enhance accuracy and efficiency.
The paper tackles the Perspective-n-Line problem for camera pose estimation by proposing a novel DLT-based method that reduces the minimum required line correspondences to 5 and achieves state-of-the-art accuracy in position estimation and reprojection error under noise, with top-3 results on real-world data and processing 1000 lines in 12 ms.
This work is concerned with camera pose estimation from correspondences of 3D/2D lines, i. e. with the Perspective-n-Line (PnL) problem. We focus on large line sets, which can be efficiently solved by methods using linear formulation of PnL. We propose a novel method "DLT-Combined-Lines" based on the Direct Linear Transformation (DLT) algorithm, which benefits from a new combination of two existing DLT methods for pose estimation. The method represents 2D structure by lines, and 3D structure by both points and lines. The redundant 3D information reduces the minimum required line correspondences to 5. A cornerstone of the method is a combined projection matri xestimated by the DLT algorithm. It contains multiple estimates of camera rotation and translation, which can be recovered after enforcing constraints of the matrix. Multiplicity of the estimates is exploited to improve the accuracy of the proposed method. For large line sets (10 and more), the method is comparable to the state-of-theart in accuracy of orientation estimation. It achieves state-of-the-art accuracy in estimation of camera position and it yields the smallest reprojection error under strong image noise. The method achieves top-3 results on real world data. The proposed method is also highly computationally effective, estimating the pose of 1000 lines in 12 ms on a desktop computer.