Abstract
Industrial inspection problems usually require specific and highly complex solutions that can be implemented at a reasonable cost, what has produced a great research and development effort in the field of computer vision. Among these problems, inspection systems for continuous feed production (named as “web-inspection”), are those that raise the main challenges for the researchers exceeding the current systems capacity. Manual inspection, that is still being used in many cases, does not allow to reach detection guarantees, accuracy, robustness and a high volume that are required in web-based manufacturing.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Beléndez, A. (1996) Fundamentos de Óptica para Ingeniería Informática, University of Alicante Press, Alicante, Spain.
Brzakovic, D. and Sari-Sarraf, H. (1994) Automated inspection of nonwoven web materials: a case study. Proc. SPIE, 2183, 214-223.
Casas, J. (1994) Optics, Librería General Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain.
Hetch, E. and Zajac, A. (1974) Optics, Addison-Wesley.
Morris, J. and Notarangelo, J. (1994) Machine vision metal inspection. Proc. SPIE, 2183, 130-136.
Newman, T. S. and Jain, A. K. (1995) A survey of automated visual inspection. Computer Vision and Image Understanding 61(2).
Oppenheim, A. V. and Wilsky, A. S. (1996) Digital Signal Processing, Prentice Hall.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Torres, F., Jiménez, L.M., Candelas, F.A. et al. Automatic inspection for phase-shift reflection defects in aluminum web production. Journal of Intelligent Manufacturing 13, 151–156 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1015708604169
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1015708604169