Syllabus
3D Reconstruction and Mapping
in Computer Vision, Robotics, and Augmented Reality
Spring 2010
MWF 11am-noon
Professor: Frank Dellaert Office Hours Mon 1-2pm, CCB 257
TA: Alex Trevor, Office Hours Thu 3-4pm, CCB 2nd Floor
Prerequisites
Linear algebra, esp. the Singular Value Decomposition (SVD). Familiarity with graphical models is a plus but not a must.
Emailing about the class:
Please use “CS8803” in the subject line, automatic by clicking the links:
Email Frank: dellaert@cc.gatech.edu, Email Alex: atrevor@gatech.edu
Class Goals
The desired learning outcomes for the students are:
-know what SLAM, SFM are
-know graphical model inference
-know its implementation using linear algebra
- understand the practical issues regarding multi-platform reconstruction
Text
I will not be using a required textbook. Instead I will be handing out notes and we will be readings some papers. Good books to have as reference are:
- Multiple View Geometry in Computer Vision, by Richard Hartley and Andrew Zisserman. Cambridge University Press.
Materials
I will be using the blackboard a lot, rather than powerpoint. Students are expected to take notes and will be asked to actively participate as scribes.
Assignments
There will be a series of programming assignments to provide familiarity with the techniques we learn in class. In addition, there will be a team-based final project where the goal is to demonstrate multi-platform 3D reconstruction and/or mapping. Each team will be asked to present this project in class.
In addition to these, there will be a couple of small exercises to prime your thoughts about the topic of the next week. They are graded at about 1% each and are not expected to be much work at all.
Finally, each student will be asked to read and present research papers in class. This will depend on the flow of the course, but will probably involve one or two “superficial” presentations (2-3 minutes with one slide) and one “in-depth” reading/presentation, as if giving a talk at a conference.
Late policy: 1 day late: 50% of the grade, 2 days late: 25% of the grade, later than that: 0% of the grade. It is always to ask prior approval to hand in an assignment late because of special reasons.
Collaboration Policy
Collaboration on assignments is encouraged at the "white board interaction" level. That is, share ideas and technical conversation, but write your own code. Students are expected to abide by the Georgia Tech Honor Code. Honest and ethical behavior is expected at all times. All incidents of suspected dishonesty will be reported to and handled by the office of student affairs.
Grading
Project: 35%
Assignments: 25%
Midterm & Final Exam: 10% each
Exercises: 10%
Paper Presentation: 5%
Class Attendance & Participation: 5%