Available Student and Research Projects
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===External Links=== | ===External Links=== | ||
* John Speich, Michael Goldfarb: [http://journals.cambridge.org/article_S0263574799001903 A compliant-mechanism-based three degree-of-freedom manipulator for small-scale manipulation] (PDF) | * John Speich, Michael Goldfarb: [http://journals.cambridge.org/article_S0263574799001903 A compliant-mechanism-based three degree-of-freedom manipulator for small-scale manipulation] (PDF) | ||
− | * Ying-Chien Tsai, Sio Hou Lei, Hendra Sudin: [http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/0960-1317/15/1/022 Design and analysis of planar compliant microgripper based on kinematic | + | * Ying-Chien Tsai, Sio Hou Lei, Hendra Sudin: [http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/0960-1317/15/1/022 Design and analysis of planar compliant microgripper based on kinematic approach] |
==See Also== | ==See Also== |
Revision as of 13:01, 11 June 2007
Contents |
Student Projects
We always offer projects to motivated students (first degree, Masters of Science, ERASMUS student, ...). If you are interested in doing a project in computer vision, let us know. Here is a description of ongoing research areas to give you an idea of possible projects.
You can also suggest a research topic yourself.
If you work with us, you can learn a lot of skills which are relevant for a career as a software developer:
- Computer Vision, Signal processing, Robotics
- Linear Algebra, Analysis
- Software Engineering
We are using state-of-the-art cross-platform software tools:
- Source-code documentation with doxygen
- Cross-platform user-interfaces with Qt. You can develop full-featured GUI-software which runs under GNU/Linux, Microsoft Windows, and MacOS!
- Platform-independent Standard Template Library
- Platform-independent Boost Library
- Scripting using the dynamically-typed object-oriented programming language Ruby
Project areas
Stitching for microscopes
Premise
- A microscope-video of an object being moved in x-, and y-direction (parallel to the focussed plane)
- Later a microscope-video of an object being moved in x-, y-, and z-direction (i.e. including depth changes)
To Do
- Generate stitched image from the input-video (linear complexity desirable) without feedback from microscope-drive
- Cross-compare images to avoid a drift of the estimated shift
- Later provide extended depth of field by maximising a focus measure.
See Also
External Links
RANSAC
Random sample consensus is a method for object recognition. This project is about recognising macroscopic rigid objects (e.g. household and office articles like cups, stapler, ...
To Do
- Select point-features and a suitable similarity measure
- Implement RANSAC algorithm and apply to at least 3 degrees-of-freedom problem.
- Demonstrate algorithm on real object.
Optional
- Extend RANSAC implementation to more degrees-of-freedom problem (maybe use line- and point-features)
See Also
- Wikipedia page on HDR
- HDR images at flickr.com
- OpenEXR library
- HDR workflow with Qtpfsgui to create HDR images and tonemapping
- HDR workflow with hugin to create HDR panoramas
Micro-Manipulation
This project is about manipulating objects which can be seen under a microscope. The size of the objects typically is up to about 750 micrometers.
Premise
An optical microscope with a motorized stage and a low-cost firewire video camera. There is an early prototype of a gripper mounted on a microtranslation stage. Parts with limited accuracy can be manufactured using rapid prototyping or in the lab.
To Do
The task is to construct and build a more advanced gripper. Possible ideas are:
- Use strain gauges to have feedback
- Develop gripper with more degrees of freedom
See Also
External Links
- John Speich, Michael Goldfarb: A compliant-mechanism-based three degree-of-freedom manipulator for small-scale manipulation (PDF)
- Ying-Chien Tsai, Sio Hou Lei, Hendra Sudin: Design and analysis of planar compliant microgripper based on kinematic approach