SPCVFeb 2

Visible Light Positioning With Lamé Curve LEDs: A Generic Approach for Camera Pose Estimation

arXiv:2602.01577v1h-index: 7
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses indoor camera pose estimation for applications like robotics or augmented reality by providing a more flexible and accurate method, though it is incremental as it builds on existing LED-based positioning techniques.

The paper tackles the problem of camera pose estimation in heterogeneous LED-shape scenarios by proposing LC-VLP, a generic visible light positioning algorithm using Lamé curve-shaped LEDs, achieving over 40% reduction in position error and 25% in rotation error in simulations, and an average position accuracy of less than 4 cm in experiments.

Camera-based visible light positioning (VLP) is a promising technique for accurate and low-cost indoor camera pose estimation (CPE). To reduce the number of required light-emitting diodes (LEDs), advanced methods commonly exploit LED shape features for positioning. Although interesting, they are typically restricted to a single LED geometry, leading to failure in heterogeneous LED-shape scenarios. To address this challenge, this paper investigates Lamé curves as a unified representation of common LED shapes and proposes a generic VLP algorithm using Lamé curve-shaped LEDs, termed LC-VLP. In the considered system, multiple ceiling-mounted Lamé curve-shaped LEDs periodically broadcast their curve parameters via visible light communication, which are captured by a camera-equipped receiver. Based on the received LED images and curve parameters, the receiver can estimate the camera pose using LC-VLP. Specifically, an LED database is constructed offline to store the curve parameters, while online positioning is formulated as a nonlinear least-squares problem and solved iteratively. To provide a reliable initialization, a correspondence-free perspective-\textit{n}-points (FreeP\textit{n}P) algorithm is further developed, enabling approximate CPE without any pre-calibrated reference points. The performance of LC-VLP is verified by both simulations and experiments. Simulations show that LC-VLP outperforms state-of-the-art methods in both circular- and rectangular-LED scenarios, achieving reductions of over 40% in position error and 25% in rotation error. Experiments further show that LC-VLP can achieve an average position accuracy of less than 4 cm.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes