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Topic Name: Carnegie Mellon System Enables Any Digital Camera
Category: Electronics
Research persons: Dr IIllah Nourbakhsh
Location: Carnegie Mellon University 5000 Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15213, United States
Details
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University, in collaboration with scientists
at NASA's Ames Research Center, have built a low-cost robotic device that
enables any digital camera to produce breathtaking gigapixel (billions of
pixels) panoramas, called GigaPans.
The technology gives people a new way to make and share images of their
environment. It is being used by students to document their communities and by
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to make Civil War sites accessible on the Web.
To promote further sharing of this imagery, Carnegie Mellon has launched a
public Web site, www.gigapan.org, where
people can upload and interactively explore panoramic images of any format.
In cooperation with Google, researchers also have created a GigaPan layer on
Google Earth. Anyone using Google Earth can now fly into these GigaPan panoramas
in the context of exploring the world.
Researchers have begun a public beta process with the GigaPan hardware, Web
site and software. The hardware technology enabling GigaPan images is a robotic
camera mount, jointly designed and manufactured by Charmed Labs of Austin Texas
(www.charmedlabs.com). The tripod-like
mount makes it possible for a digital camera to take hundreds of overlapping
images of landscapes, buildings or rooms. Then, using software developed by
Carnegie Mellon and Ames, these images can be arranged in a grid and digitally
stitched together into a single image that could consist of tens of billions of
pixels.
These huge image files can then be explored by zooming in on features of
interest in a manner similar to Google Earth. "We have taken imagery and made it
a new tool for exploration and for enhancing global understanding," said Illah
Nourbakhsh, associate professor in the School of Computer Science's
Robotics Institute. Nourbakhsh and Randy
Sargent, senior systems scientist at Carnegie
Mellon West in Moffett Field, Calif., led GigaPan's development. "An
ordinary photo makes it possible to cross language barriers," Nourbakhsh
explained. "But a GigaPan provides so much information that it leads to
conversations between the person who took the panoramas and the people who are
exploring it and discovering new details."
Last spring, the Pennsylvania Board of Tourism began to use GigaPan to enable
people to virtually explore Civil War sites. The technology is also being used
for Robot250, an arts-based robotics program in the Pittsburgh area. Robot250
will increase technical literacy by teaching students, artists and other members
of the public how to build customized robots. (See
www.robot250.org.)
Nourbakhsh and his colleagues recently began to work with UNESCO's
International Bureau of Education (IBE) and its Associated Schools Network on a
project that will link school children in different parts of the world in
exploring issues of cultural identity through a classroom project. Middle school
children from Pittsburgh to South Africa to Trinidad and Tobago will use the
GigaPan camera to share images of their neighborhoods, lives and cultures. "This
project will explore curriculum development from the local to the global level,"
said IBE Director Clementina Acedo. "It is an extraordinary opportunity to link
a school-community based educational practice with high-end technology in the
service of children's innovative learning, personal development and world
communication. Plans call for the experiences of these children from poorer and
richer countries to be presented at the 48th session of the International
Conference of Education scheduled to take place in Geneva in November 2008.
Besides being a tool for education, Nourbakhsh and Sargent see the GigaPan
system as an important tool for ecologists, biologists and other scientists.
They plan to foster this effort by making several dozen GigaPans available to
leading scientists with support from the Fine Foundation of Pittsburgh.
Nourbakhsh hopes the non-commercial GigaPan site will help to develop a
community of GigaPan producers and users. "We're not interested in becoming just
another photo-sharing site," he said. "We want as many people as possible
involved. GigaPan is not just about the vision of the person who makes the
image. People who explore the image can make discoveries and gain insights in
ways that may be just as important."
Sargent got the idea for GigaPan when he was a technical staff member at Ames
Research Center, helping to develop software for combining images from NASA's
Mars Exploration Rovers into panoramas. He became convinced that the same
technology could open people's eyes to the diversity of their own planet. "It is
increasingly important to give people a broad view of the world, particularly to
help us understand different cultures and different environments," he said.
"It's too easy to have blinders on and to only see and understand what is
local."
The GigaPan camera system is part of a larger effort known as the Global
Connection Project,
www.cs.cmu.edu/~globalconn, led by Nourbakhsh and Sargent. Its purpose is to
make people all over the world more aware of their neighbors. Global
Connection's earlier accomplishments include the publication of the National
Geographic magazine photography and story layer in Google Earth.
About Researchers & Contacts:
IIllah Nourbakhsh
Associate Professor
Associated centers: VASC and CFR
Email address: illah@ri.cmu.edu
Mailing address:
Carnegie Mellon University
Robotics Institute
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
Media Contact:
Byron Spice
Phone: 412-268-9068
Email: bspice@cs.cmu.edu
Anne Watzman
Phone: 412-268-3830
Email: aw16@andrew.cmu.edu
For more information:
http://gc.cs.cmu.edu/gigapan/embed.html
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~globalconn
http://www.robot250.org
http://www.charmedlabs.com/
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