Abstract:
An interactive virtual telepresence system allows an Internet user to view three-dimensional objects from any perspective in a studio at a remote server. The system includes several video cameras trained on the three-dimensional objects and a computer that calculates the voxel-representation of the solid. The server broadcasts each camera view and voxel information. A user selects the viewing perspective desired, and the computer at the user&#39;s site receives the nearest camera views to the requested perspective and voxel information for the interpolation and renders the selected view.

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     1. Technical Field 
     The present invention relates to the efficient representation and communication of synthesized perspective -views of three-dimensional objects, and more specifically to paring down the number of Internet packets that must be sent in real-time at a network client&#39;s request to support interactive video sessions. 
     2. Description of the Prior Art 
     The limited bandwidth of Internet connections severely constrains the interactive real-time communication of graphical images, especially three-dimensional images. Ordinarily, dozens of video cameras would be trained on a single three-dimensional subject, each from a different perspective. A user could then pick one of the perspectives to view, or pick one that can be interpolated from several of the nearby perspectives. But sending all this information in parallel and computing all the interpolations that many users could request can overtax the server and its Internet pipe. 
     It is possible to represent solid objects with so-called “voxels”. These are the three-dimensional equivalents of pixels which are used to paint two-dimensional pictures. Each voxel has an x,y,z address in space, and a value that indicates whether the point is inside or outside the solid. The voxel map can be computed from the video images provided by a sufficient number of perspectives. The surface appearance of the solid can also be captured by each such camera. Interpolated intermediate images can be had by warping or morphing. 
     U.S. Pat. No. 5,613,048, issued to Chen and Williams describes a first approach for interpolating solid structures. An offset map is developed between two neighboring images from correspondence maps. Such Patent is incorporated herein by reference. 
     A second approach uses the structural information about an object. Voxel information is derived from the video images provided by several cameras. Depth maps can be calculated for each camera&#39;s viewpoint, and is obtained from correspondences between surface points, e.g., triangulation. Another technique involves using silhouettes in intersections. Once the voxels for a solid are determined, intermediate (virtual) views can be obtained from neighboring (real) views. 
     Prior art methods for the three-dimension reconstruction of remote environments consume enormous computational and communication resources, and require far too many sensors to be economically feasible. So real-time applications are practically impossible with conventional techniques for modeling and rendering abject appearance. 
     Recent advances at the “Virtualized Reality” laboratory at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) demonstrate that real-time three-dimension shape reconstruction is possible. Video-based view generation algorithms can produce high-quality results, albeit with small geometric errors. 
     Research in three-dimension reconstruction of remote environments has shown that it is possible to recover both object appearance and sounds in remote environments. The methods far modeling abject appearance, however, consume enormous computational and communication resources, and require far too many sensors to be economically feasible. These traits make real-time applications nearly impossible without fundamental algorithmic improvements. We therefore focus our attention on techniques for modeling and rendering object appearance, which can loosely be divided into three groups: direct three-dimension, image-space, and video-based. 
     Direct methods of three-dimension reconstruction measure the time-of-flight or phase variations in active illumination reflected from the scene. These measurements are converted directly into measurements of three-dimension distances. Because of their reliance on active illumination, multiple sensors can not co-exist in the same environment. As a result, they are inappropriate for real-time three-dimension reconstruction of complete environments. 
     Image-space methods create a database of all possible rays emanating from every object that point in all directions. To generate a new image, all the rays that pass through the desired viewpoint are projected on a plane. See, A. Katayama, K. Tanaka, T. Oshino, and H. Tamura, “A Viewpoint Dependent Stereoscopic Display Using Interpolation Of Multi-viewpoint Images”, SPIE Proc. Vol. 2409: Stereoscopic Displays and Virtual Reality Systems II, p. 11-20, 1995. And see, M. Levoy and P. Hanrahan, “Light Field Rendering”, SIGGRAPH &#39;96, August 1996. Also, S. J. Gortler, R. Grzeszczuk, R. Szeliski, and M. F. Cohen, “The Lumigraph”, SIGGRAPH &#39;96, 1996. Such references are all examples of image-space methods, and all can produce high-quality images. However, these techniques require thousands of viewpoints, making them impractical for real-time event capture. 
     Video-based modeling and rendering methods explicitly create three-dimension model structures and use real video images as models of scene appearance. A three-dimension model structure is extracted from a set of video images. New views are generated by projecting the original video images onto a three-dimension model, which can then be projected into the desired viewpoint. 
     Images from two viewpoints can be used to estimate the three-dimension structure in image-based stereo reconstruction. Given the positions, orientations, and focal lengths of the cameras, correspondences are used to triangulate the three-dimension position of each point of the observed surface. The output is called a depth image or range image. Each pixel is described with a distance, e.g., rather than color. A recent survey of stereo algorithms is given by U. R. Dhond and J. K. Aggarwal, in “Structure From Stereo—A Review”, IEEE Trans. On Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, pp. 1489-1510, 1989. While stereo methods can provide three-dimension structure estimates, they are so-far unable to produce high-quality, high-accuracy results an a consistent basis across a reasonable variation in scene content. 
     The recovery of complete three-dimension models of a scene required multiple range images. This is because a single range image includes a three-dimension structure only for the visible surfaces. At the “Virtualized Reality” laboratory at Carnegie Mellon University, the present inventor, Takeo Kanade has shown that formulating this problem as a volumetric reconstruction process yields high-quality, robust solutions even in the presence of the errors made in the stereo processes. See, P. W. Rander, P. J. Narayanan, and T. Kanade, “Recovery of Dynamic Scene Structure from Multiple Image Sequences”, Int&#39;l Conf. On Multisensor Fusion and Integration for Intelligent Systems, 1996. 
     The volume containing the objects can be decomposed into small samples, e.g., voxels. Each voxel is then evaluated to determine whether it lies inside or outside the object. When neighboring voxels have different status (i.e., one inside and one outside), then the object surface must pass between them. Such property is used to extract the object surface, usually as a triangle mesh model, once all voxels have been evaluated. The technique is similar to integration techniques used with direct three-dimension measurement techniques with some modifications to improve its robustness to errors in the stereo-computed range images. See, Curless and M. Levoy, “A Volumetric Method for Building Complex Models from Range Images”, SIGGRAPH &#39;96, 1996. And see, A. Hilton, A, J. Stoddart, J. Illingworth, and T. Windeatt, “Reliable Surface Reconstruction From Multiple Range Images”, Proceedings of ECCV &#39;96, pp. 117-126, April 1996. Also, M. Wheeler, “Automatic Modeling and Localization for Object Recognition”, Ph.D. thesis, Carnegie Mellon University, 1996. 
     A principle limitation of these methods is the processing speed. For example, CMU clustered seventeen Intel Pentium II-based PC&#39;s and inter-connected them with a 10-base-T ETHERNET network, and still needed mare than 1000 seconds to process each second of video input. 
     Once a three-dimension structure is available, two methods can be used to generate arbitrary viewpoints. One method computes the “fundamental” appearance of the objects in the scene, independent of viewpoint. The result is a texture map for the three-dimension objects in the scene. This formulation maps well to modern hardware graphics accelerators because the core rendering primitive is a texture-mapped triangle. CMU and others have used this technique. See, A. Katkere, S. Moezzi, D. Y. Kuramura, and R. Jam, “Towards Video-based Immersive Environments”, MultiMedia Systems, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 69-85, 1997; S. Moezzi, A. Katkere, D. Y. Kuramura, and R. Jam, “Reality Modeling and Visualization from Multiple Video Sequences”, IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, vol. 16, no. 6, pp. 58-63, 1996; P. J. Narayanan, P. W, Rander, and T. Kanade, “Constructing Virtual Worlds Using Dense Stereo”. IEEE Int&#39;l Conf. On Computer Vision, 1998; and, P. W. Rander, P. J. Narayanan, and T. Kanade, “Virtualized Reality: Constructing Time-Varying Virtual Worlds from Real World Events”, IEEE Visualization &#39;97, 1997. 
     A second method skips the step of texture map creation. Instead, it maps the input images directly to the output image. Skipping the texture map creation helps avoid the quality degradations that might occur because of extra pixel transformations and any geometric errors in the three-dimension model. The three-dimension information is used to determine how each input pixel should map to the output, either a full three-dimension model or range images. The input images are, essentially projected onto a three-dimension scene structure, so the structure can be projected into the desired output image, all in a single operation. 
     It is possible to individually weigh the contributions to the output image because each input image can be mapped separately to the output. For example, as the desired viewpoint approaches a real viewpoint, the weighting can emphasize the contribution of that real view white de-emphasizing the other real views. This technique has been explored by the present inventor, Takeo Kanade, and others. See, Chen and L. Williams, “View Interpolation For Image Synthesis”, SIGGRAPH &#39;93, pp. 279-288, 1993. And see, B. Curless and M. Levoy, “A Volumetric Method Far Building Complex Models From Range Images”, SIGGRAPH &#39;96, 1996. Also, T. Kanade; P. J. Narayanan, and P. W. Rander, “Virtualized Reality: Concept And Early Results”, IEEE Workshop on the Representation of Visual Scenes, June 1995. And; P. W. Rander, P. J. Narayanan, and T. Kanade, “Virtualized Reality: Constructing Time-Varying Virtual Worlds From Real World Events”. IEEE Visualization &#39;97, 1997; S. M. Seitz and C. R. Dyer, “Physically-Valid View Synthesis By Image Interpolation”, Proc. Workshop an Representation of Visual Scenes, pp. 18-25, 1995; and, S. M. Seitz and C. R. Dyer, “View Morphing”, SIGGRAPH &#39;96, pp. 21-30, 1996. 
     Image-based methods are such that the view generation time is independent of scene complexity, so the rendering of purely virtual three-dimension content an low-end PCs can be speeded up. When a desired viewpoint exactly matches an input viewpoint, the output image is exactly the input image. As a result, the output contains no error, regardless of any error in the underlying three-dimension structure. Recent analysis at the “Virtualized Reality” laboratory at CMU has shown that the most critical three-dimension information that is needed is the boundaries between regions of the images. Especially those regions that correspond to surfaces at greatly different depths: See, H. Saito, S. Baba, M. Kimura, S. Vedula, and T. Kanade, “Appearance-Based Virtual View Generation Of Temporally-Varying Events From Multi-Camera Images In The Three-dimension Room”, Three-dimension Digital Imaging and Modeling (3D1M&#39;99), Oct. 1999. (Also CMU-CS-99-127). 
     Such boundaries, often called silhouettes or occluding contours, provide powerful visual cues to human observers. Methods that do not accurately describe such boundaries cause glaring errors that are easy to spot. In such cases, any realism of the virtual image vanishes. See, H. Saito, S. Baba, M. Kimura, S. Vedula, and T. Kanade, “Appearance-Based Virtual View Generation Of Temporally-Varying Events From Multi-Camera Images In The Three-dimension Room”, Three-dimension Digital Imaging and Modeling (3D1M&#39;99), Oct. 1999. Also; CMU-CS-99-127. In contrast, humans rarely detect inaccuracies of surface geometry because the human visual system is much less sensitive to this type of error. 
     Recent analysis has shown that identification of occluding contours is far more important than precise estimation of smooth surface structure. With this insight, recent efforts at CMU have focussed an recovering the three-dimension scene structure from the abject silhouettes themselves. This process begins by extracting object silhouettes from the input images. These silhouettes are directly integrated in three-dimension to recover a three-dimension model of scene structure. 
     This process bears close resemblance to the earlier CMU work of using stereo to compute dense range images and then using integration to get a three-dimension model. In method embodiments of the present invention, a reconstruction process estimates correspondences only at silhouette boundaries. The correspondence estimation occurs directly in a volume, rather than using the intermediate representation of a range image. In method embodiments of the present invention computational cost is greatly reduced, and generated views are more realistic. 
     Useful three-dimension structures can be obtained without large computational expense. The video-based rendering techniques developed at CMU provide high-quality renderings that are immune to small geometric errors on continuous surfaces. These methods can be combined to create an interactive remote collaboration system. Reconstruction from several cameras at one end generates multiple video streams and a three-dimension model sequence. This information is then used to generate the novel viewpoints using video-based rendering techniques. 
     In constructing the system several factors influence the overall design, number of sites participating, number of people at each site, balance among computational resources; communication bandwidth, and communication latency. 
     For a two-site, one-person-per-site, communication with relatively short communication latencies, it is possible to construct the three-dimension shape more efficiently than for a general number of viewers, because knowledge about the remote viewer location can guide the reconstruction process. Similarly, knowing the remote viewer location can be exploited to reduce communication bandwidth and to speedup the rendering process. 
     To further reduce the communication bandwidth needed, the transferred data can be compressed. For multi-camera video, each video could be encoded using MPEG algorithms. The three-dimension geometry could be reduced to a single bit per voxel, and could then be compressed using volumetric data structures, such as oct tree or run-length encoding. 
     Alternative methods for three-dimension modeling and rendering have been developed in recent years, e.g., direct three-dimension modeling and rendering, and also image-space modeling and rendering. The direct three-dimension methods estimate, three-dimension structure directly from simple measurements of physical systems: The most common technique is to actively illuminate the scene with a laser, measure either the time or flight or the phase shift of the laser light reflected back to the source, concert this measurement to distance between sensor and illuminated surface, and then compute the surface&#39;s three-dimension position. The laser can then be scanned across the scene to capture many three-dimension points in the scene. These techniques are used in commercial products from K2T, Inc. (www:k2t.com) and Cyra Technologies, Inc., as well as in many custom systems. A modification of this technique is to scan a light stripe across the scene. 
     The other approach is to illuminate the entire scene several times and then to measure the returned light .during precise intervals of time. Each illumination can yield another bit of depth resolution, so high resolution can be quickly achieved. This technology is incorporated in commercial products from 3DV Systems Ltd (www:3d systems.com). 
     Either method yields three-dimension information, but only for the surfaces visible from the viewpoint of the sensor. Several researchers have developed algorithms to merge these results into complete three-dimension models. The methods based on volumetric integration have proven most successful. See B. Curless and M. Levoy, “A Volumetric Method For Building Complex Models From Range Images”, SIGGRAPH &#39;96, 1996. A. Hilton, A. J. Stoddart, J. Illingworth, and T. Windeatt; “Reliable Surface Reconstruction From Multiple Range Images”, Proceedings of ECCV &#39;96, pp. 117-126, April 1996; and M. Wheeler, “Automatic Modeling And Localization For Object Recognition”, Ph.D. thesis, Carnegie Mellon University; 1996. 
     Two limitations make direct three-dimension measurement impractical. First, multiple sensors cannot coexist in the same environment because of the active scene illumination. With multiple sensors working simultaneously, the illumination from one sensor would interfere that of others. In addition, eye safety is always an issue when using lasers around humans. Second, scanning the space with a laser means that three-dimension measurements are made at different times. Such image, then, is actually a time-sequential sampling of shape, not a snapshot as is captured with a photograph. This sensor characteristic leads to apparent shape distortions for fast-moving objects. 
     Image-space modeling and rendering is an alternative to explicit three-dimension model recovery. It models all possible light rays emanating from the scene. An image can be considered as a two-dimension bundle of rays from this ray space, so the rendering in this case involves selecting the best rays to produce each pixel in the output image. A surprisingly simple version of this concept is the object movie in Apple Quicklime VR. Several hundred images are captured at precise positions around the object. A viewing program then lets the user manipulate the object, which looks to the user like three-dimension rotation of the real object. In fact, the viewing program is simply selecting the closest view from its database. 
     More sophisticated examples actually interpolate rays from the input images to synthesize new viewpoints. The first example of this approach was first presented in Katayama&#39;s work A. Katayama, K. Tanaka, T. Oshino, and H. Tamura, “A Viewpoint Dependent Stereoscopic Display Using Interpolation Of Multi-viewpoint Images”, SPIE Proc. Vol. 2409: Stereoscopic Displays and Virtual Reality Systems II, pp. 11-20, 1995, which was recently extended into the light field, M. Levoy and P. Hanrahan, “Light Field Rendering”, SIGGRAPH &#39;96, August 1996. Also see “The Lumigraph”, S. J. Gortler; R. Grzeszczuk, R. Szeliski, and M. F. Cohen, SIGGRAPH &#39;96, 1996. In the light field method, cameras are precisely positioned to directly sample all of the rays in the space, thereby completely filling the ray space. In the Lumigraph, an algorithm is presented to extrapolate images from a set of arbitrarily-placed cameras to fill the ray space. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention is an interactive virtual telepresence system that allows an Internet user to view -three-dimensional objects from any perspective in a studio at a remote server. The system includes several video cameras trained on the three-dimensional objects and a computer that calculates the voxel-representation of the solid: The server broadcasts each camera view and voxel information. A user selects the viewing perspective desired, and the computer at the user&#39;s site receives the nearest camera views to the requested perspective and voxel information for the interpolation and renders the selected view. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1 is a functional block diagram of an Internet system for virtual telepresence in an embodiment of the present invention that uses immersive video in which strategically located cameras monitor a scene from different perspectives; 
     FIG. 2 is a functional block diagram of a second virtual telepresence Internet system embodiment of the present invention that computes the voxels and supplies all the video streams from every strategically located camera monitoring a scene from different perspectives; 
     FIG. 3 is a functional block diagram of a third virtual telepresence Internet system embodiment of the present invention that computes the voxels and supplies two or three of the video streams from the more usefully located cameras monitoring a scene from different perspectives, the two or three video perspectives supplied are those closest to a novel perspective selection divulged by the user; and 
     FIG. 4 is a functional block diagram of a fourth virtual telepresence Internet system embodiment of the present invention that computes the voxels and supplies one of the video streams from the most usefully located camera monitoring a scene from different perspectives, such video perspective supplied is the one closest to a novel perspective selection divulged by the user. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     FIG. 1 is a functional black diagram of an Internet system for virtual telepresence, and this embodiment of the present invention is refereed to herein by the general reference numeral  100 . The system  100  allows a user to be virtually present in a studio  102  in which some three-dimension object  104  or scene is on-camera. The viewpoint of the user can be from any angle the viewer chooses. If implemented well enough, the viewer has the sense that the viewer is inside the scene and can move about, e.g., to get a better look. 
     In general, conventional Lumigraph systems provide for digital three-dimensional imaging of objects that allows for viewing images of the object from arbitrary vantage points. See, U.S. Pat. No. 6,023,523, issued to Cohen, et al., Feb. 8, 2000, and incorporated herein by reference. And see, S. J. Gortler, et al., “The Lumigraph”, Computer Graphics Proceedings, Annual Conference Series, 1996, pp. 43-54, ACM-0-89791-746-41961008. A complete appearance of either a synthetic or real object or a scene is collected. A representation of the appearance is used to render images of the object from arty vantage paint. The appearance of an object is a collection of light rays that emanate from the object in all directions. The system stores the representation of the appearance as a set of coefficients of a four-dimensional function, referred to as the Lumigraph function. From the Lumigraph function with these coefficients, the Lumigraph system can generate two-dimensional images of the object from any vantage point. The Lumigraph system generates an image by evaluating the Lumigraph function to identify the intensity values of light rays that would emanate from the object to farm the image. The Lumigraph system then combines these intensity values to form the image. 
     But, such conventional systems used the way they were intended are impractical when the Internet is the communication intermediary. This is because the available bandwidth is so limited, and conventional systems require extraordinarily wide bandwidths to communicate all the real images in parallel and huge processor overheads for computing virtual perspectives. When these needs are multiplied by the numbers of users involved, the task becomes impossibly enormous. 
     The studio  102  is populated with many cameras set at different viewpoints around the object, e.g., front, left, right; top, and back. All these real viewpoints are represented by a group of cameras  106 - 108  and their corresponding perspective views  110 - 112 . In practical applications, at least two cameras and perspectives will be needed. Any of a number of virtual perspectives that are not actually populated with a camera can be computed by interpolation of the real views. A pair of virtual perspectives  114  and  116  represent these novel views. Each camera has a video capture unit  118 - 120 , respectively, that includes a frame-grabber function. Each captured video frame typically includes a background image that surrounds object  104  that needs to be removed from the scene by a background subtractor  122 - 124 . 
     A silhouette is computed from the background subtracted images by a silhouette processor  126 . For details on the construction of a prior art silhouette processor see, H. Saito, S. Baba; M. Kimura, S. Vedula, and T. Kanade, “Appearance-Based Virtual View Generation Of Temparally-Varying Events From Multi-Camera images In The Three-dimension Room”, Three-dimension Digital Imaging and Modeling (3D1M99), Oct. 1999. 
     The intersections of rays created by projecting through silhouettes are computed by an intersection processor  128 . For information on implementing an intersection processor  128 , see, P. Lacroute, “Analysis Of A Parallel Volume Rendering System Based On The Shear-Warp Factorization”, Visualization and Computer Graphics, IEEE Transactions on Volume, 23, Sept, 1996, pp. 218-231. And see, A. Katkere, S. Moezzi, D. Y. Kuramura, and R. Jam, “Towards Video-based Immersive Environments”, MuItiMedia Systems, vol. 5, no. 2, pp.69-85, 1997. The output are voxels. U.S. Pat. No. 5,544,283, issued Aug. 6, 1996, to Kaufman, et al., describes methods; and apparatus for real-time rendering of high resolution volumetric images. Such Patent is incorporated herein by reference. 
     A voxel calculation for the voxels representing object  104  are done by a voxel processor  130 . For a discussion, see “A Multi-Camera Method For 3D Digitization Of Dynamic, Real-World Events”, a thesis by Peter Rander, presented to Carnegie Melton University, The Robotics Institute, copyright May 1998, CMU-RI-TR-98-12. Voxel processing depends on a series of crass-sectional images that represent a volume. Such cross-sectional digital images are a volumetric dataset. Each image or slice in a given dataset comprises picture elements (pixels). The distance between any two consecutive pixel centers in, any slice within a dataset is the interpixel distance. And the distance between any two consecutive slices is the interstice distance. 
     The processing of a volumetric: dataset begins by stacking the slices according to the interpixel and interstice distances so that the data exists in a “virtual” coordinate space which accurately reflects the real world dimensions of the originally sampled volume. Additional slices can be inserted between the dataset&#39;s original slices so that the entire volume in computer memory is represented as one solid block of data. The pixels in such block can be processed as volume pixels (voxels) such that a volume can be translated and rotated and a rendering of the dataset can be obtained. One voxel can block the view of another voxel, depending on their relative positions and the view perspective. So voxels are assigned an opacity value by an opacity transformation function. Such function provides a direct, linear relationship between voxel intensity and opacity. The higher a voxel&#39;s intensity value, the more opaque that voxel is when rendered. 
     The surfaces of object  104  are rendered by a rendering processor  132  for all the available viewpoints. In particular; see, P. Lacroute, “Analysis Of Parallel Volume Rendering System Based On The Shear-Warp Factorization”, Visualization and Computer Graphics, IEEE Transactions on Volume, Sep. 23, 1996, pp. 218-231. For more details to help on possible implementations, see, P.Debevec, C. Taylor, and J. Malik, “Modeling And Rendering Architecture From Photographs: A Hybrid Geometry-based And Image-based Approach”, SIGGRAPH &#39;96, 1996; and see, A. Hilton, A. J. Stoddart, J. Illingworth, and: T. Windeatt, “Reliable Surface Reconstruction From Multiple Range Images”, Proceedings of ECCV &#39;96, pp.117-126, April 1996; and see, M. Levoy and P. Hanrahan, “Light Field Rendering”, SIGGRAPH &#39;96, August 1996. Requested views are synthesized or interpolated from the available real viewpoints. Depending on the novel viewpoint being synthesized, some of the real viewpoints will be more important than others, Some of the real views may have no significant contribution at all to the computed views. 
     The real viewpoints are output as signals  134 - 136  and interpolated novel viewpoints are represented by signals  138  and  140 . Such interpolated novel viewpoints are produced at the express request of one or more remote users over the Internet. They interpolated images are warped or morphed from the real viewpoint images. See, S. Seitz, et al., “Physically-Valid View Synthesis By .Image Interpolation”, Proc. Workshop an Representations of Visual Scenes; Cambridge Mass., 1996. Another way to implement the interpolation processor  134  is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,831,619, issued Nov. 3, 1998, to A. Nakagaw, et al., and also U.S. Pat. No. 5,613,048, issued Mar. 18, 1997, to S. Chen, et al. Such Patents are incorporated herein by reference. 
     A network server  142  selects only those signals  134 - 140 , voxel, and rendering information necessary to support a particular network connection. Such may be implemented : with Microsoft WINDOWS-NT, ACTIVE SERVER PAGES (ASP), and Internet Information Server (IIS). A selected signal  144  is transmitted by a network interface controller (NIC)  146 . Any user information and requests are returned by a signal  148  and a portion is used to control the rendering processor  132  with a control signal  150 . 
     FIG. 2 represents a system  200  that reduces the computational loads and bandwidth demands on a webserver that transmits real-time three-dimension video. System  200  images a 3D object  202  with an adequate set of cameras represented by cameras  204 - 206 . Each captures real views A-C, and novel views N 1  and N 2  can be computed. Each camera is connected to a video capture device  208 - 210  and a background subtractor  212 - 214 . A background-subtracted real-view (A-C)  216 - 218  is used by a silhouette processor  220 . An intersection processor  222  computes the intersections from the silhouettes, and feeds a voxel calculator  224 . The result is a voxel database  226  that is supplied to a network server  228  along with background-subtracted real-views (A-C)  216 - 218  for the Internet  230 . All the background-subtracted real-views and the voxel calculation are supplied to a network client  232  on demand, e.g., as represented by views A-C  234 - 236  and a voxel database  238 . A novel view (N)  240  is interpolated from the available information by a renderor  242  in response to a perspective selection  244  provided by a user. 
     In effect, system  200  distributes the rendering task to each network client. In some applications there could be thousands of independent network clients  232  all asking for the same data from a single network server  228 . Each client could be asking for a unique perspective selection  244  provided by its respective user, so this architecture avoids rendering bottlenecks. 
     FIG. 3 represents another system embodiment of the present invention that reduces the computational loads and bandwidth demands on a webserver that transmits real-time 3D video, and is referred to herein by the general reference numeral  300 . System  300  images a three-dimension object  302  with an adequate set of cameras represented by cameras  304 - 306 . Each captures real views A-C, and novel views N 1  and N 2  can be computed by Internet clients at their remote sites and with their respective platforms. Each camera is connected to a video capture device  308 - 310  and a background subtractor  312 - 314 . A background-subtracted real-view (A-C)  316 - 318  is used by a silhouette processor  320 . An intersection processor  322  computes the intersections from the silhouettes, and feeds a voxel calculator  324 . The result is a voxel database  326  that is supplied to a network server  328  along with background-subtracted real-views (A-C) for the Internet  330 , The voxel calculation and only selected background-subtracted real-views are supplied to each unique network client  332  on demand. For example, FIG. 3 represents the selection of real views A  334  and B  335 . The elimination of the unnecessary views (e.g., view C) reduces the communication toad; and therefore the bandwidth demands are not as great. A voxel database  338  must be included for rendering. 
     A novel view (N 1 )  340  is interpolated from the available information by a renderor,  342  in response to a perspective selection  344  provided by a user. Such novel view N 1  depends more on real views A and B and could be reasonably computed without real view C. However, another network client and corresponding user could select a perspective that needs real views B and C to produce a novel view N 2 , for example. 
     System  300  also distributes the rendering task to each network client. It further reduces the amount of data that must be transferred over the Internet in real time by not communicating those real views that are not needed by particular network clients and users. 
     In alternative embodiments of the present invention, the communication of voxel information takes advantage of data compression and decompression techniques. For example, it is only occasionally necessary to send a complete voxel database description. In the interim, only those voxels that have changed since the last frame need to be identified. The decompression can keep a running model updated with such change information. Such compression can be included in network servers  228  and  328 , and the corresponding decompression in network clients  232  and  332 . 
     FIG. 4 represents a further telepresence system embodiment of the present invention, and is referred to herein by the general reference numeral  400 . System  400  images a three-dimension object  402  wish an adequate set of cameras represented by cameras  404 - 406 . Each captures real views A-C, and novel views N 1  and N 2  are computed by network server  428 . Each camera is connected to a video capture device  408 - 410  and a background subtractor  412 - 414 . A background-subtracted real-view (A-C)  416 - 418  is used by a silhouette processor  420 . An intersection processor  422  computes the intersections from the silhouettes, and feeds a voxel calculator  424 . The result is a voxel database  426  that is supplied to a network server  428  along with background-subtracted real-views (A-C)  416 - 418  for the Internet  430 . Intermediate views N 1 , N 2  are computed by the network server  428 , so that novel view computation at the network client is smooth. The voxel calculation and only one background-subtracted real-view or intermediate view are supplied to each unique network client  432  on demand. For example, FIG. 4 represents the selection of real view A  434  and a voxel database  438 . The elimination of all the other views (e.g., views B and C and N 1  and N 2 ) further reduces the communication load, and the bandwidth demands are quite modest. 
     A novel view (N)  440  is interpolated from the available information by a renderor  442  in response to a perspective selection  444  provided by a user. Such novel view N depends more on real view A and could be satisfactorily computed without real views B and C. However, another network client and corresponding user could select a perspective that needs real views B or C to produce another novel view. 
     System  400  distributes the rendering task to each network client. It further reduces the amount of data that must be transferred over the Internet in real time by communicating only the one real view or intermediate view closest to the novel view needed by particular network clients and users. 
     Although the invention is preferably described herein with reference to the preferred embodiment, one skilled in the art will readily appreciate that other applications may be substituted for those set forth herein without departing from the spirit and cope of the present invention. Accordingly, the invention should only be limited by the claims included below.