Evaluation of control points' distribution on distortions and geometric transformations for aerial images rectification

Geometric distortions are inevitable in aerial images. A raw uncalibrated aerial image acquired from a non-metric digital camera which carried by an aircraft normally has lens and perspective distortions and could not be used directly without undergoing image rectification. Ground control points (GC...

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發表在:Procedia Engineering
主要作者: 2-s2.0-84901014602
格式: Conference paper
語言:English
出版: Elsevier Ltd 2012
在線閱讀:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84901014602&doi=10.1016%2fj.proeng.2012.07.275&partnerID=40&md5=8c602e09ee21e0f9034919337e61ded8
id Liew L.H.; Wang Y.C.; Cheah W.S.
spelling Liew L.H.; Wang Y.C.; Cheah W.S.
2-s2.0-84901014602
Evaluation of control points' distribution on distortions and geometric transformations for aerial images rectification
2012
Procedia Engineering
41

10.1016/j.proeng.2012.07.275
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84901014602&doi=10.1016%2fj.proeng.2012.07.275&partnerID=40&md5=8c602e09ee21e0f9034919337e61ded8
Geometric distortions are inevitable in aerial images. A raw uncalibrated aerial image acquired from a non-metric digital camera which carried by an aircraft normally has lens and perspective distortions and could not be used directly without undergoing image rectification. Ground control points (GCPs) are important features used in non-parametric approach for aerial image rectification. Although the importance of GCPs in rectifying remote sensing images has been highlighted, not many recent studies research on the quality selection of GCP, effectiveness of GCPs' distribution and sufficient quantity of GCPs. A simulation test is conducted using grid images to examine the effect of different distribution patterns of control points on distortions and geometric transformations. The rectification results are measured by using the total root mean square error (RMSE). It shows that lower order global transformation has limitation in rectifying images with complex distortions. It also demonstrates that centre distribution gives the lowest total RMSE and its total RMSE is extremely low. However, the distance analysis of control points which reflects the distortion rate before rectification shows that control points distributed at the centre of the image is actually much less distorted than control points that are placed at border and corner. Hence, uniform distribution provides better distribution of control points with the consideration of overall deformation rates at the entire image for rectification. © 2012 The Authors.
Elsevier Ltd
18777058
English
Conference paper
All Open Access; Gold Open Access; Green Open Access
author 2-s2.0-84901014602
spellingShingle 2-s2.0-84901014602
Evaluation of control points' distribution on distortions and geometric transformations for aerial images rectification
author_facet 2-s2.0-84901014602
author_sort 2-s2.0-84901014602
title Evaluation of control points' distribution on distortions and geometric transformations for aerial images rectification
title_short Evaluation of control points' distribution on distortions and geometric transformations for aerial images rectification
title_full Evaluation of control points' distribution on distortions and geometric transformations for aerial images rectification
title_fullStr Evaluation of control points' distribution on distortions and geometric transformations for aerial images rectification
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of control points' distribution on distortions and geometric transformations for aerial images rectification
title_sort Evaluation of control points' distribution on distortions and geometric transformations for aerial images rectification
publishDate 2012
container_title Procedia Engineering
container_volume 41
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.proeng.2012.07.275
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84901014602&doi=10.1016%2fj.proeng.2012.07.275&partnerID=40&md5=8c602e09ee21e0f9034919337e61ded8
description Geometric distortions are inevitable in aerial images. A raw uncalibrated aerial image acquired from a non-metric digital camera which carried by an aircraft normally has lens and perspective distortions and could not be used directly without undergoing image rectification. Ground control points (GCPs) are important features used in non-parametric approach for aerial image rectification. Although the importance of GCPs in rectifying remote sensing images has been highlighted, not many recent studies research on the quality selection of GCP, effectiveness of GCPs' distribution and sufficient quantity of GCPs. A simulation test is conducted using grid images to examine the effect of different distribution patterns of control points on distortions and geometric transformations. The rectification results are measured by using the total root mean square error (RMSE). It shows that lower order global transformation has limitation in rectifying images with complex distortions. It also demonstrates that centre distribution gives the lowest total RMSE and its total RMSE is extremely low. However, the distance analysis of control points which reflects the distortion rate before rectification shows that control points distributed at the centre of the image is actually much less distorted than control points that are placed at border and corner. Hence, uniform distribution provides better distribution of control points with the consideration of overall deformation rates at the entire image for rectification. © 2012 The Authors.
publisher Elsevier Ltd
issn 18777058
language English
format Conference paper
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access; Green Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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