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Multiplane calibration is a variant of [[camera auto-calibration]] that allows one to compute the parameters of a camera from two or more views of a planar surface. The seminal work in multiplane calibration is due to Zhang.<ref name=zhang2000>Z. Zhang. "A flexible new technique for camera calibration." IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence. vol. 22(11), pp. 1330-1334 (2000).</ref> [[Camera resectioning#Zhang.27s method|Zhang's method]] calibrates cameras by solving a particular [[System of linear equations#Homogeneous systems|homogeneous linear system]] that captures the homographic relationships between multiple perspective views of the same plane. This multiview approach is popular because, in practice, it is more natural to capture multiple views of a single planar surface - like a chessboard - than to construct a precise 3D calibration rig, as required by DLT calibration. The following figures demonstrate a practical application of multiplane camera calibration from multiple views of a chessboard.<ref name=bouguet2013>J. Bouguet, "Camera calibration toolbox for MATLAB". http://www.vision.caltech.edu/bouguetj/calib_doc/. (2013).</ref>
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