Beyond Lambert: reconstructing specular surfaces using color

We present a photometric stereo method for non-diffuse materials that does not require an explicit reflectance model or reference object. By computing a data-dependent rotation of RGB color space, we show that the specular reflection effects can be separated from the much simpler, diffuse (approxima...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in2005 IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR'05) Vol. 2; pp. 619 - 626 vol. 2
Main Authors Mallick, S.P., Zickler, T.E., Kriegman, D.J., Belhumeur, P.N.
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 2005
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Summary:We present a photometric stereo method for non-diffuse materials that does not require an explicit reflectance model or reference object. By computing a data-dependent rotation of RGB color space, we show that the specular reflection effects can be separated from the much simpler, diffuse (approximately Lambertian) reflection effects for surfaces that can be modeled with dichromatic reflectance. Images in this transformed color space are used to obtain photometric reconstructions that are independent of the specular reflectance. In contrast to other methods for highlight removal based on dichromatic color separation (e.g., color histogram analysis and/or polarization), we do not explicitly recover the specular and diffuse components of an image. Instead, we simply find a transformation of color space that yields more direct access to shape information. The method is purely local and is able to handle surfaces with arbitrary texture.
ISBN:0769523722
9780769523729
ISSN:1063-6919
1063-6919
DOI:10.1109/CVPR.2005.88