Automatic alignment of high-resolution multi-projector displays using an uncalibrated camera
IEEE Visualization 2000, October 2000
Abstract
A scalable, high-resolution display may be constructed by tiling many projected images over a single display surface. One fundamental challenge for such a display is to avoid visible seams due to misalignment among the projectors. Traditional methods for avoiding seams involve sophisticated mechanical devices and expensive CRT projectors, coupled with extensive human effort for fine-tuning the projectors. The paper describes an automatic alignment method that relies on an inexpensive, uncalibrated camera to measure the relative mismatches between neighboring projectors, and then correct the projected imagery to avoid seams without significant human effort.
Links
- Paper (PDF, 429K)
- The Display Wall Project (other papers and info)
Citation
Yuqun Chen, Douglas W. Clark, Adam Finkelstein, Timothy C. Housel, and Kai Li.
"Automatic alignment of high-resolution multi-projector displays using an uncalibrated camera."
IEEE Visualization 2000, pp. 125-130, October 2000.
BibTeX
@inproceedings{Chen:2000:AAO, author = "Yuqun Chen and Douglas W. Clark and Adam Finkelstein and Timothy C. Housel and Kai Li", title = "Automatic alignment of high-resolution multi-projector displays using an uncalibrated camera", booktitle = "IEEE Visualization 2000", year = "2000", month = oct, pages = "125--130" }