3D object reconstruction and 6D-pose estimation from 2D shape for robotic grasping of objects
This incremental method addresses robotic grasping scenarios where 3D models are available and precise 2D segmentation is possible, without requiring 3D depth for training.
The paper tackles 3D object reconstruction and 6D-pose estimation from 2D images for robotic grasping by using object shape knowledge and 2D silhouettes, reducing free parameters and enabling real-world usability as demonstrated in robot experiments.
We propose a method for 3D object reconstruction and 6D-pose estimation from 2D images that uses knowledge about object shape as the primary key. In the proposed pipeline, recognition and labeling of objects in 2D images deliver 2D segment silhouettes that are compared with the 2D silhouettes of projections obtained from various views of a 3D model representing the recognized object class. By computing transformation parameters directly from the 2D images, the number of free parameters required during the registration process is reduced, making the approach feasible. Furthermore, 3D transformations and projective geometry are employed to arrive at a full 3D reconstruction of the object in camera space using a calibrated set up. Inclusion of a second camera allows resolving remaining ambiguities. The method is quantitatively evaluated using synthetic data and tested with real data, and additional results for the well-known Linemod data set are shown. In robot experiments, successful grasping of objects demonstrates its usability in real-world environments, and, where possible, a comparison with other methods is provided. The method is applicable to scenarios where 3D object models, e.g., CAD-models or point clouds, are available and precise pixel-wise segmentation maps of 2D images can be obtained. Different from other methods, the method does not use 3D depth for training, widening the domain of application.