Abstract:The Next Best View (NBV) problem is a pivotal challenge in 3D robotic scanning, with the potential to greatly improve the efficiency of object capture and reconstruction. Current methods for determining the NBV often overlook view overlaps, assume a virtual origin point for the camera's focus, and rely on voxel representations of 3D data. To address these issues and improve the practicality of scanning unknown objects, we propose an NBV policy in which the next view explores the boundary of the scanned point cloud, and the overlap is intrinsically considered. The scanning distance or camera working distance is adjustable and flexible. To this end, a model-based approach is proposed where the next sensor positions are searched iteratively based on a reference model. A score is calculated by considering the overlaps between newly scanned and existing data, as well as the final convergence. Additionally, following the boundary exploration idea, a deep learning network, Boundary Exploration NBV network (BENBV-Net), is designed and proposed, which can be used to predict the NBV directly from the scanned data without requiring the reference model. It predicts the scores for given boundaries, and the boundary with the highest score is selected as the target point of the next best view. BENBV-Net improves the speed of NBV generation while maintaining the performance of the model-based approach. Our proposed methods are evaluated and compared with existing approaches on the ShapeNet, ModelNet, and 3D Repository datasets. Experimental results demonstrate that our approach outperforms others in terms of scanning efficiency and overlap, both of which are crucial for practical 3D scanning applications. The related code is released at \url{github.com/leihui6/BENBV}.
Abstract:Hand-eye calibration, as a fundamental task in vision-based robotic systems, aims to estimate the transformation matrix between the coordinate frame of the camera and the robot flange. Most approaches to hand-eye calibration rely on external markers or human assistance. We proposed Look at Robot Base Once (LRBO), a novel methodology that addresses the hand-eye calibration problem without external calibration objects or human support, but with the robot base. Using point clouds of the robot base, a transformation matrix from the coordinate frame of the camera to the robot base is established as I=AXB. To this end, we exploit learning-based 3D detection and registration algorithms to estimate the location and orientation of the robot base. The robustness and accuracy of the method are quantified by ground-truth-based evaluation, and the accuracy result is compared with other 3D vision-based calibration methods. To assess the feasibility of our methodology, we carried out experiments utilizing a low-cost structured light scanner across varying joint configurations and groups of experiments. The proposed hand-eye calibration method achieved a translation deviation of 0.930 mm and a rotation deviation of 0.265 degrees according to the experimental results. Additionally, the 3D reconstruction experiments demonstrated a rotation error of 0.994 degrees and a position error of 1.697 mm. Moreover, our method offers the potential to be completed in 1 second, which is the fastest compared to other 3D hand-eye calibration methods. Code is released at github.com/leihui6/LRBO.