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Dive into the research topics where Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel.


Photonics Letters of Poland | 2009

Electro-optic guest-host system containing azobenzene chromophores in PMMA matrix

Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel; Krzysztof Świtkowski; B. Pura; Ewa Schab-Balcerzak; Mariola Siwy

The paper presents the way that colour can serve solving the problem of calibration points indexing in a camera geometrical calibration process. We propose a technique in which indexes of calibration points in a black-and-white chessboard are represented as sets of colour regions in the neighbourhood of calibration points. We provide some general rules for designing a colour calibration chessboard and provide a method of calibration image analysis. We show that this approach leads to obtaining better results than in the case of widely used methods employing information about already indexed points to compute indexes. We also report constraints concerning the technique. Nowadays we are witnessing an increasing need for camera geometrical calibration systems. They are vital for such applications as 3D modelling, 3D reconstruction, assembly control systems, etc. Wherever possible, calibration objects placed in the scene are used in a camera geometrical calibration process. This approach significantly increases accuracy of calibration results and makes the calibration data extraction process easier and universal. There are many geometrical camera calibration techniques for a known calibration scene [1]. A great number of them use as an input calibration points which are localised and indexed in the scene. In this paper we propose the technique of calibration points indexing which uses a colour chessboard. The presented technique was developed by solving problems we encountered during experiments with our earlier methods of camera calibration scene analysis [2]-[3]. In particular, the proposed technique increases the number of indexed points points in case of local lack of calibration points detection. At the beginning of the paper we present a way of designing a chessboard pattern. Then we describe a calibration point indexing method, and finally we show experimental results. A black-and-white chessboard is widely used in order to obtain sub-pixel accuracy of calibration points localisation [1]. Calibration points are defined as corners of chessboard squares. Assuming the availability of rough localisation of these points, the points can be indexed. Noting that differences in distances between neighbouring points in calibration scene images differ slightly, one of the local searching methods can be employed (e.g. [2]). Methods of this type search for a calibration point to be indexed, using a window of a certain size. The position of the window is determined by a vector representing the distance between two previously indexed points in the same row or column. However, experiments show that this approach has its disadvantages, as described below. * E-mail: [email protected] Firstly, there is a danger of omitting some points during indexing in case of local lack of calibration points detection in a neighbourhood (e.g. caused by the presence of non-homogeneous light in the calibration scene). A particularly unfavourable situation is when the local lack of detection effects in the appearance of separated regions of detected calibration points. It is worth saying that such situations are likely to happen for calibration points situated near image borders. Such points are very important for the analysis of optical nonlinearities, and a lack of them can significantly influence the accuracy of distortion modelling. Secondly, such methods may give wrong results in the case of optical distortion with strong nonlinearities when getting information about the neighbouring index is not an easy task. Beside this, the methods are very sensitive to a single false localisation of a calibration point. Such a single false localisation can even result in false indexing of a big set of calibration points. To avoid the above-mentioned problems, we propose using a black-and-white chessboard which contains the coded index of a calibration point in the form of colour squares situated in the nearest neighbourhood of each point. The index of a certain calibration point is determined by colours of four nearest neighbouring squares (Fig.1). An order of squares in such foursome is important. Because the size of a colour square is determined only by the possibility of correct colour detection, the size of a colour square can be smaller than the size of a black or white square. The larger size of a black or white square is determined by the requirements of the exact localisation step which follows the indexing of calibration points [3]. In this step, edge information is extracted from a blackand-white chessboard. This edge information needs larger Artur Nowakowski, Wladyslaw Skarbek Institute of Radioelectronics, Warsaw University of Technology, Nowowiejska 15/19, 00-665 Warszawa, [email protected] Received February 10, 2009; accepted March 27, 2009; published March 31, 2009 http://www.photonics.pl/PLP


Optical Materials | 2012

Poly(etherimide)s and poly(esterimide)s containing azobenzene units: Characterization and study of photoinduced optical anisotropy

Ewa Schab-Balcerzak; Marzena Grucela-Zajac; Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel; Krzysztof Switkowski


Journal of Applied Polymer Science | 2011

Post and prepolymerization strategies to develop novel photochromic poly(esterimide)s

Ewa Schab-Balcerzak; Mariola Siwy; Bozena Jarzabek; Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel; Krzysztof Switkowski; B. Pura


Optical Materials | 2015

Large and highly stable photoinduced birefringence in poly(amideimide)s with two azochromophores per structural unit

Jolanta Konieczkowska; Ewa Schab-Balcerzak; Mariola Siwy; Krzysztof Switkowski; Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel


Dyes and Pigments | 2015

Photoinduced birefringence of novel azobenzene poly(esterimide)s; the effect of chromophore substituent and excitation conditions

Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel; Jolanta Konieczkowska; Dariusz Szmigiel; Krzysztof Switkowski; Mariola Siwy; Piotr Kuszewski; Ewa Schab-Balcerzak


Materials Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Poly(amic acid)s and their poly(amide imide) counterparts containing azobenzene moieties: Characterization, imidization kinetics and photochromic properties

Jolanta Konieczkowska; Henryk Janeczek; Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel; Ewa Schab-Balcerzak


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology A-chemistry | 2016

Influence of supramolecular interactions on photoresponsive behavior of azobenzene poly(amide imide)s

Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel; Jolanta Konieczkowska; Krzysztof Switkowski; Jerzy Antonowicz; Barbara Trzebicka; Dariusz Szmigiel; Ewa Schab-Balcerzak


Optical Materials | 2015

Poly(esterimide) bearing azobenzene units as photoaligning layer for liquid crystals

Rafał Węgłowski; Wiktor Piecek; Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel; Jolanta Konieczkowska; Ewa Schab-Balcerzak


Optical Materials | 2015

Thermal, optical and photoinduced properties of a series of homo and co-polyimides with two kinds of covalently bonded azo-dyes and their supramolecular counterparts

Jolanta Konieczkowska; Magdalena Wójtowicz; Anna Sobolewska; Joanna Noga; Anna Jarczyk-Jedryka; Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel; Ewa Schab-Balcerzak


Applied Physics B | 2011

Two-photon-induced birefringence in azo-dye bearing polyimide; the birefringence changes versus the writing power

Anna Kozanecka-Szmigiel; Krzysztof Switkowski; Ewa Schab-Balcerzak; E. Grabiec

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Ewa Schab-Balcerzak

Warsaw University of Technology

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Krzysztof Switkowski

Warsaw University of Technology

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Mariola Siwy

Warsaw University of Technology

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Barbara Trzebicka

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Henryk Janeczek

Polish Academy of Sciences

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J.G. Małecki

University of Silesia in Katowice

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Jerzy Antonowicz

Warsaw University of Technology

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B. Pura

Warsaw University of Technology

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