Calibrate a Monocular Camera
A monocular camera is a common type of vision sensor used in automated driving applications. When mounted on an ego vehicle, this camera can detect objects, detect lane boundaries, and track objects through a scene.
Before you can use the camera, you must calibrate it. Camera calibration is the process of estimating the intrinsic and extrinsic parameters of a camera using images of a calibration pattern, such as a checkerboard. After you estimate the intrinsic and extrinsic parameters, you can use them to configure a model of a monocular camera.
Estimate Intrinsic Parameters
The intrinsic parameters of a camera are the properties of the camera, such as its focal length and optical center. To estimate these parameters for a monocular camera, use Computer Vision Toolbox™ functions and images of a checkerboard pattern.
If the camera has a standard lens, use the
estimateCameraParameters
function.If the camera has a fisheye lens, use the
estimateFisheyeParameters
function.
Alternatively, to better visualize the results, use the Camera Calibrator app. For information on setting up the camera, preparing the checkerboard pattern, and calibration techniques, see Using the Single Camera Calibrator App.
Place Checkerboard for Extrinsic Parameter Estimation
For a monocular camera mounted on a vehicle, the extrinsic parameters define the mounting position of that camera. These parameters include the rotation angles of the camera with respect to the vehicle coordinate system, and the height of the camera above the ground.
Before you can estimate the extrinsic parameters, you must capture an image of a checkerboard pattern from the camera. Use the same checkerboard pattern that you used to estimate the intrinsic parameters.
The checkerboard uses a pattern-centric coordinate system (XP, YP), where the XP-axis points to the right and the YP-axis points down. The checkerboard origin is the bottom-right corner of the top-left square of the checkerboard.
When placing the checkerboard pattern in relation to the vehicle, the XP- and YP-axes must align with the XV- and YV-axes of the vehicle. In the vehicle coordinate system, the XV-axis points forward from the vehicle and the YV-axis points to the left, as viewed when facing forward. The origin is on the road surface, directly below the camera center (the focal point of the camera).
The orientation of the pattern can be either horizontal or vertical.
Horizontal Orientation
In the horizontal orientation, the checkerboard pattern is either on the ground or parallel to the ground. You can place the pattern in front of the vehicle, in back of the vehicle, or on the left or right side of the vehicle.
Vertical Orientation
In the vertical orientation, the checkerboard pattern is perpendicular to the ground. You can place the pattern in front of the vehicle, in back of the vehicle, or on the left of right side of the vehicle.
Estimate Extrinsic Parameters
After placing the checkerboard in the
location you want, capture an image of it using
the monocular camera. Then, use the estimateMonoCameraParameters
function
to estimate the extrinsic parameters. To use this
function, you must specify the following:
The intrinsic parameters of the camera
The key points detected in the image, in this case the corners of the checkerboard squares
The world points of the checkerboard
The height of the checkerboard pattern's origin above the ground
For example, for image I
and intrinsic parameters
intrinsics
, the following code
estimates the extrinsic parameters. By default,
estimateMonoCameraParameters
assumes that the camera is facing forward and that
the checkerboard pattern has a horizontal
orientation.
[imagePoints,boardSize] = detectCheckerboardPoints(I); squareSize = 0.029; % Square size in meters worldPoints = generateCheckerboardPoints(boardSize,squareSize); patternOriginHeight = 0; % Pattern is on ground [pitch,yaw,roll,height] = estimateMonoCameraParameters(intrinsics, ... imagePoints,worldPoints,patternOriginHeight);
To increase estimation accuracy of these parameters, capture multiple images and average the values of the image points.
Configure Camera Using Intrinsic and Extrinsic Parameters
Once you have the estimated intrinsic and
extrinsic parameters, you can use the monoCamera
object to configure a model
of the camera. The following sample code shows how
to configure the camera using parameters
intrinsics
,
height
,
pitch
, yaw
,
and roll
:
monoCam = monoCamera(intrinsics,height,'Pitch',pitch,'Yaw',yaw,'Roll',roll);
See Also
Apps
Functions
estimateFisheyeParameters
|estimateCameraParameters
|estimateMonoCameraParameters
|detectCheckerboardPoints
|generateCheckerboardPoints