Paper
12 February 2001 Three-dimensional reconstruction for high-speed volume measurement
Dah-Jye Lee, Robert M. Lane, Guang-Hwa Chang
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Volume measurement is an important process for various industries such as food processing, fruit and vegetable grading, etc. Value or price is often determined by the size of product. In seafood industry, for example, oyster meat is separated into four grades before being packaged. Large size grade means higher selling price than small size. More consistent packaging size is also an indication of high quality. Product size can be measured optically with machine vision technology for on-line inspection and grading systems. Most optical grading techniques use a two-dimensional area projection or the weight of the product to estimate the actual product volume. These methods are subject to measurement inaccuracy because of the missing thickness information. An algorithm combines laser triangulation technique with two-dimensional measurement to reconstruct a three-dimensional surface for volume measurement is introduced in this paper. The result of this technique shows a significant accuracy improvement from the area-projection method.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Dah-Jye Lee, Robert M. Lane, and Guang-Hwa Chang "Three-dimensional reconstruction for high-speed volume measurement", Proc. SPIE 4189, Machine Vision and Three-Dimensional Imaging Systems for Inspection and Metrology, (12 February 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.417201
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CITATIONS
Cited by 15 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
3D modeling

Cameras

3D metrology

3D image processing

Image processing

Machine vision

Near infrared

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