Abstract. This article presents a method for the automated detection and quantification of cracks on masonry surfaces. The core of the approach is a neural network trained for semantic segmentation, which enables the identification of cracks in image data. To facilitate a physically meaningful analysis, the image data is combined with 3D geometric information. A 3D point cloud is projected onto the image plane to establish correspondences between 2D image points and 3D spatial coordinates. These 2D–3D correspondences are utilized to evaluate the detected cracks in a geometrically accurate manner. Based on the segmentation results and the projected 3D data, cracks can be classified within the point cloud and analyzed metrically. The Crack length is determined using a graph-based model, in which the crack structure is represented as a network and the longest continuous crack path is computed using Dijkstra’s algorithm. The Crack width is measured in the images based on the segmentation masks and a scaling factor derived from the 2D–3D correspondences. The proposed method enables a precise and automated assessment of crack patterns in masonry structures by leveraging both image and 3D data.
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Lorenz Krefft
Ludwig Hoegner
ISPRS annals of the photogrammetry, remote sensing and spatial information sciences
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Krefft et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68d464e031b076d99fa63e0e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-annals-x-4-w6-2025-113-2025
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