Method for out-of-focus camera calibration

  • Bell T
  • Xu J
  • Zhang S
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Abstract

State-of-the-art camera calibration methods assume that the camera is at least nearly in focus and thus fail if the camera is substantially defocused. This paper presents a method which enables the accurate calibration of an out-of-focus camera. Specifically, the proposed method uses a digital display (e.g., liquid crystal display monitor) to generate fringe patterns that encode feature points into the carrier phase; these feature points can be accurately recovered, even if the fringe patterns are substantially blurred (i.e., the camera is substantially defocused). Experiments demonstrated that the proposed method can accurately calibrate a camera regardless of the amount of defocusing: the focal length difference is approximately 0.2% when the camera is focused compared to when the camera is substantially defocused.

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Bell, T., Xu, J., & Zhang, S. (2016). Method for out-of-focus camera calibration. Applied Optics, 55(9), 2346. https://doi.org/10.1364/ao.55.002346

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