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Resolution vs. Tracking error: Zoom as a gain controller

Abstract:
During tracking, lens zoom acts as a gain between scene dynamics and fixation errors, providing a trade-off between maximising resolution and minimising tracking error. Using a linear Kalman filter model, it is shown that when image measurement error scales with focal length, the filter is invariant to zoom. When the error is of fixed size, however, zooming alters the balance between process and measurement errors in a counter-intuitive manner. It is shown that this balance can be restored by appropriate adjustment of the process noise. With a zoom invariant filter, zoom can be used to ensure that fixation errors remain bounded. To this end, an error-variance control method is proposed which gives high confidence that the target will not leave the image during tracking. To implement such a scheme, equipment delays and responses must be known, including those of the zoom lenses. Experiments to measure these are described, and overall results are presented for 30Hz tracking of real scenes.

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Engineering Science
Role:
Author


Journal:
Proceedings of the IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition More from this journal
Volume:
1
Publication date:
2003-01-01
ISSN:
1063-6919


Language:
English
Pubs id:
pubs:109618
UUID:
uuid:68c0d123-f569-4ca1-9153-885b1c921c41
Local pid:
pubs:109618
Source identifiers:
109618
Deposit date:
2013-11-17

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