Patents by Inventor Nigel J. Foster

Nigel J. Foster has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 8442304
    Abstract: This invention provides a system and method for determining the three-dimensional alignment of a modeled object or scene. A 3D (stereo) sensor system views the object to derive a runtime 3D representation of the scene containing the object. Rectified images from each stereo head are preprocessed to enhance their edge features. 3D points are computed for each pair of cameras to derive a 3D point cloud. The amount of 3D data from the point cloud is reduced by extracting higher-level geometric shapes (HLGS), such as line segments. Found HLGS from runtime are corresponded to HLGS on the model to produce candidate 3D poses. A coarse scoring process prunes the number of poses. The remaining candidate poses are then subjected to a further more-refined scoring process. These surviving candidate poses are then verified whereby the closest match is the best refined three-dimensional pose.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 29, 2008
    Date of Patent: May 14, 2013
    Assignee: Cognex Corporation
    Inventors: Cyril C. Marrion, Nigel J. Foster, Lifeng Liu, David Y. Li, Guruprasad Shivaram, Aaron S. Wallack, Xiangyun Ye
  • Patent number: 8363972
    Abstract: Disclosed is a method for determining the absence or presence of one or more instances of a predetermined pattern in an image, and for determining the location of each found instance within a multidimensional space. A model represents the pattern to be found, the model including a plurality of probes. Each probe represents a relative position at which a test is performed in an image at a given pose, each such test contributing evidence that the pattern exists at the pose. The method further includes a comparison of the model with a run-time image at each of a plurality of poses. A match score is computed at each pose to provide a match score surface. Then, the match score is compared with an accept threshold, and used to provide the location any instances of the pattern in the image.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 31, 2004
    Date of Patent: January 29, 2013
    Assignee: Cognex Corporation
    Inventors: William M. Silver, E. John McGarry, Matthew L. Hill, Nigel J. Foster, Sanjay Nichani, Willard P. Foster, Adam Wagman
  • Patent number: 8363956
    Abstract: Disclosed is a method for determining the absence or presence of one or more instances of a predetermined pattern in an image, and for determining the location of each found instance within a multidimensional space. A model represents the pattern to be found, the model including a plurality of probes. Each probe represents a relative position at which a test is performed in an image at a given pose, each such test contributing evidence that the pattern exists at the pose. The method further includes a comparison of the model with a run-time image at each of a plurality of poses. A match score is computed at each pose to provide a match score surface. Then, the match score is compared with an accept threshold, and used to provide the location any instances of the pattern in the image.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 30, 2004
    Date of Patent: January 29, 2013
    Assignee: Cognex Corporation
    Inventors: William M. Silver, E. John McGarry, Matthew L. Hill, Nigel J. Foster, Sanjay Nichani, Willard P. Foster, Adam Wagman
  • Patent number: 8265395
    Abstract: Disclosed is a method for determining the absence or presence of one or more instances of a predetermined pattern in an image, and for determining the location of each found instance within a multidimensional space. A model represents the pattern to be found, the model including a plurality of probes. Each probe represents a relative position at which a test is performed in an image at a given pose, each such test contributing evidence that the pattern exists at the pose. The method further includes a comparison of the model with a run-time image at each of a plurality of poses. A match score is computed at each pose to provide a match score surface. Then, the match score is compared with an accept threshold, and used to provide the location any instances of the pattern in the image.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 21, 2004
    Date of Patent: September 11, 2012
    Assignee: Cognex Corporation
    Inventors: William M. Silver, E. John McGarry, Matt Hill, Nigel J. Foster, Willard Foster
  • Patent number: 8244041
    Abstract: Disclosed is a method for determining the absence or presence of one or more instances of a predetermined pattern in an image, and for determining the location of each found instance within a multidimensional space. A model represents the pattern to be found, the model including a plurality of probes. Each probe represents a relative position at which a test is performed in an image at a given pose, each such test contributing evidence that the pattern exists at the pose. The method further includes a comparison of the model with a run-time image at each of a plurality of poses. A match score is computed at each pose to provide a match score surface. Then, the match score is compared with an accept threshold, and used to provide the location any instances of the pattern in the image.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 31, 2004
    Date of Patent: August 14, 2012
    Assignee: Cognex Corporation
    Inventors: William M. Silver, E. John McGarry, Nigel J. Foster, Sanjay Nichani
  • Publication number: 20100166294
    Abstract: This invention provides a system and method for determining the three-dimensional alignment of a modeledobject or scene. After calibration, a 3D (stereo) sensor system views the object to derive a runtime 3D representation of the scene containing the object. Rectified images from each stereo head are preprocessed to enhance their edge features. A stereo matching process is then performed on at least two (a pair) of the rectified preprocessed images at a time by locating a predetermined feature on a first image and then locating the same feature in the other image. 3D points are computed for each pair of cameras to derive a 3D point cloud. The 3D point cloud is generated by transforming the 3D points of each camera pair into the world 3D space from the world calibration. The amount of 3D data from the point cloud is reduced by extracting higher-level geometric shapes (HLGS), such as line segments. Found HLGS from runtime are corresponded to HLGS on the model to produce candidate 3D poses.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 29, 2008
    Publication date: July 1, 2010
    Applicant: COGNEX CORPORATION
    Inventors: Cyril C. Marrion, Nigel J. Foster, Lifeng Liu, David Y. Li, Guruprasad Shivaram, Aaron S. Wallack, Xiangyun Ye
  • Patent number: 6002793
    Abstract: A machine vision system for finding an angle object orientation, or other characteristic, of an object in an image. The system determines the boundary pixels, determines the segment orientation angles associated with each successive segment of n boundary pixels, assigns a weight to each angle, generates a histogram of the angles according to their weights, normalizes the histogram to an angle range covering 90.degree., and generates a signal representing the angle corresponding to a selected peak in the histogram. In one embodiment, the system interpolates between neighboring pixels across the boundary to obtain a grey-scale boundary of sub-pixel accuracy.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 26, 1994
    Date of Patent: December 14, 1999
    Assignee: Cognex Corporation
    Inventors: William M. Silver, Nigel J. Foster, Cyril C. Marrion, Jr.