An implementation of the Super 4-points Congruent Sets (Super 4PCS) algorithm presented in:
Super 4PCS: Fast Global Pointcloud Registration via Smart Indexing Nicolas Mellado, Dror Aiger, Niloy J. Mitra Symposium on Geometry Processing 2014.
Copyright 2014 Nicolas Mellado
Authors: Nicolas Mellado, Dror Aiger
- 18th May 2016: Super4PCS v0.2.1-alpha is available, fixing a problematic crash introduced in previous release.
- 3rd May 2016: Super4PCS v0.2-alpha is out !
- 23th March 2016: Super4PCS can now be compiled with Visual Studio 2015! Checkout the Wiki for more details.
- For everyone: Sup4PCS website: news, gallery, tutorials, ...
- For users: Sup4PCS wiki: compilation instruction, usage, ...
- For the I-like-to-read-Computer&Graphics-papers people: paper project page.
Data acquisition in large-scale scenes regularly involves accumulating information across multiple scans. A common approach is to locally align scan pairs using Iterative Closest Point (ICP) algorithm (or its variants), but requires static scenes and small motion between scan pairs. This prevents accumulating data across multiple scan sessions and/or different acquisition modalities (e.g., stereo, depth scans). Alternatively, one can use a global registration algorithm allowing scans to be in arbitrary initial poses. The state-of-the-art global registration algorithm, 4PCS, however has a quadratic time complexity in the number of data points. This vastly limits its applicability to acquisition of large environments. We present Super 4PCS for global pointcloud registration that is optimal, i.e., runs in linear time (in the number of data points) and is also output sensitive in the complexity of the alignment problem based on the (unknown) overlap across scan pairs. Technically, we map the algorithm as an ‘instance problem’ and solve it efficiently using a smart indexing data organization. The algorithm is simple, memory-efficient, and fast. We demonstrate that Super 4PCS results in significant speedup over alternative approaches and allows unstructured efficient acquisition of scenes at scales previously not possible. Complete source code and datasets are available for research use at http://geometry.cs.ucl.ac.uk/projects/2014/super4PCS/.