<p>The invention of the camera is a milestone in human technological progress. This optical instrument enabled us to capture a visual image of a real-world object/scene at a particular instant for later viewing. We exist in a three-dimensional space (Scargill 2020) i.e. any point in this universe can be expressed using three spatial coordinates. On the other hand the images we capture using a camera are two-dimensional. In this regard the camera can be considered as a device that maps a three-dimensional scene to a two-dimensional image (Szeliski 2010). This raises the following interesting question-Is it possible to infer the structure of a three-dimensional scene from its two-dimensional image? Or in other words Is it possible to reverse the functionality of a camera? Images are projections of a certain portion of our three-dimensional world on a two-dimensional surface. This mapping of a scene to an image is a many-to-one function since an infinite number of three-dimensional scenes can produce the same image. During this imaging process there is some loss of information; specifically the depth information is lost (Hartley et al. 2003). An image certainly cannot contain all the information of the three-dimensional scene it represents and therefore the problem of inferring the three-dimensional structure from its image is degenerate.</p>
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