1 / 18

3D Stereo Data for the Estimation of Pavement Construction Quantities and Costs

3D Stereo Data for the Estimation of Pavement Construction Quantities and Costs. Mr. Donald L. Reid Department of Public Works Nashville Metropolitan Government. GIS-T March 27, 2007. Existing Process. Numerous issues with existing pavement data

darva
Download Presentation

3D Stereo Data for the Estimation of Pavement Construction Quantities and Costs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 3D Stereo Data for the Estimation of Pavement Construction Quantities and Costs Mr. Donald L. Reid Department of Public Works Nashville Metropolitan Government GIS-T March 27, 2007

  2. Existing Process • Numerous issues with existing pavement data • Accurate data collection entails a manual, costly, and time consuming process • Alternative method could be to use stereogrammetric feature collection based on stereo imagery

  3. What is Stereo Imagery • When you look at an object you see it from different angles with each eye • Your brain merges these images into a single image to provide you with depth perception…the ability to perceive distance • This enables you in essence to see in “3D”

  4. What is Stereo Imagery (cont.) • When aerial imagery is collected it is collected such that each picture overlaps the previous one by 60% • This overlap provides an area in the two images of the same place from different angles • Through a process called aero triangulation it is possible to accurately determine the exact x,y position of each pixel in the image • The images can then be mathematically aligned along the flight line using a process called epi-polar correction to enable a stereo view • This enables viewing and measurement in 3D

  5. Stereo Overlap Shot 1 Stereo Overlap Shot 2 Flight Path

  6. Stereo Overlap Shot 1 Shot 2 Flight Path

  7. Stereo Overlap Shot 1 Stereo Overlap Area Shot 2 Flight Path

  8. Example of Stereo Overlap Area

  9. Two Ways to See Imagery in Stereo • In order to see in stereo, we must trick our brain to see stereo images in a way similar to that which we normally use • One way to trick the brain is to use a concept called anaglyph • Anaglyph uses one blue sensitive image and one red sensitive image • Using red-blue glasses we trick the brain to see two images at once and let the brain do its’ magic

  10. Anaglyph stereo image of downtown Nashville

  11. Stereo Viewing UsingShuttered Glasses • Electronically shuttered glasses alternate putting one image in the left eye and the other image in the right eye • If done at a image refresh rate the brain processes the images just as it would if it were viewing in real life • Desktop photogrammetric work stations usually use this method • This the method being used in our pilot program

  12. Stereo Imagery Database • Properly registered stereo imagery is accurate to to +/- 1pixel in the horizontal axis and 1.5 pixel in the vertical axis • The Nashville data set is accurate to +/- 6” in horizontal and +/- 9” in vertical • Typical extracted feature accuracies are similar to image accuracy depending on operator and training • Accuracy is generally uniform throughout the image • Digital orthoimagery accuracy is subject to accuracy of imagery used to create the ortho

  13. Imagery Access • Individual stereo image pairs can be accessed using any georeferenced data layer • For Nashville Metro we are currently using a map layer as the access layer • Nashville/Davidson County is 112GB and contains approximately 1400 stereo pairs

  14. Stereo Imagery Provides Feature Extraction Source Desktop stereo photogrammetry provides: • Improved accuracy over digital orthophotography • Ability to measure distance over the ground • Ability to extract 3D planimetric features such as roof elevation footprints • Ability to extract digital elevation (DEM’s and topographic contours) for specific areas

  15. Nashville Project Status • Stereo imagery data has been prepared and project access files prepared • Hardware and software are installed and working properly • Training has been completed • Pavement data collection process has been defined • Data collection commenced this week

  16. Questions/Contacts Mr. Don Reid, Project Manager, Nashville Metropolitan Government/Public Works 1-615-880-1673, donald.reid@nashville.gov Mr. Jeff Deason, GIS Management, Collier Engineering 1-615- 331-1441, jeff.deason@collierengineering.com Mr. Lonnie Hearne, Stereo Software, SimWright Inc. 1-615-497-0569, lonnie.hearne@simwright.com

More Related