20 research outputs found
Sketching space
In this paper, we present a sketch modelling system which we call Stilton. The program resembles a desktop VRML browser, allowing a user to navigate a three-dimensional model in a perspective projection, or panoramic photographs, which the program maps onto the scene as a `floor' and `walls'. We place an imaginary two-dimensional drawing plane in front of the user, and any geometric information that user sketches onto this plane may be reconstructed to form solid objects through an optimization process. We show how the system can be used to reconstruct geometry from panoramic images, or to add new objects to an existing model. While panoramic imaging can greatly assist with some aspects of site familiarization and qualitative assessment of a site, without the addition of some foreground geometry they offer only limited utility in a design context. Therefore, we suggest that the system may be of use in `just-in-time' CAD recovery of complex environments, such as shop floors, or construction sites, by recovering objects through sketched overlays, where other methods such as automatic line-retrieval may be impossible. The result of using the system in this manner is the `sketching of space' - sketching out a volume around the user - and once the geometry has been recovered, the designer is free to quickly sketch design ideas into the newly constructed context, or analyze the space around them. Although end-user trials have not, as yet, been undertaken we believe that this implementation may afford a user-interface that is both accessible and robust, and that the rapid growth of pen-computing devices will further stimulate activity in this area
Lightweight Face Relighting
In this paper we present a method to relight human faces in real time, using consumer-grade graphics cards even with limited 3D capabilities. We show how to render faces using a combination of a simple, hardware-accelerated parametric model simulating skin shading and a detail texture map, and provide robust procedures to estimate all the necessary parameters for a given face. Our model strikes a balance between the difficulty of realistic face rendering (given the very specific reflectance properties of skin) and the goal of real-time rendering with limited hardware capabilities. This is accomplished by automatically generating an optimal set of parameters for a simple rendering model. We offer a discussion of the issues in face rendering to discern the pros and cons of various rendering models and to generalize our approach to most of the current hardware constraints. We provide results demonstrating the usability of our approach and the improvements we introduce both in the performance and in the visual quality of the resulting faces
Self-supervised Outdoor Scene Relighting
Outdoor scene relighting is a challenging problem that requires good
understanding of the scene geometry, illumination and albedo. Current
techniques are completely supervised, requiring high quality synthetic
renderings to train a solution. Such renderings are synthesized using priors
learned from limited data. In contrast, we propose a self-supervised approach
for relighting. Our approach is trained only on corpora of images collected
from the internet without any user-supervision. This virtually endless source
of training data allows training a general relighting solution. Our approach
first decomposes an image into its albedo, geometry and illumination. A novel
relighting is then produced by modifying the illumination parameters. Our
solution capture shadow using a dedicated shadow prediction map, and does not
rely on accurate geometry estimation. We evaluate our technique subjectively
and objectively using a new dataset with ground-truth relighting. Results show
the ability of our technique to produce photo-realistic and physically
plausible results, that generalizes to unseen scenes.Comment: Published in ECCV '20,
http://gvv.mpi-inf.mpg.de/projects/SelfRelight
Free-viewpoint Indoor Neural Relighting from Multi-view Stereo
We introduce a neural relighting algorithm for captured indoors scenes, that
allows interactive free-viewpoint navigation. Our method allows illumination to
be changed synthetically, while coherently rendering cast shadows and complex
glossy materials. We start with multiple images of the scene and a 3D mesh
obtained by multi-view stereo (MVS) reconstruction. We assume that lighting is
well-explained as the sum of a view-independent diffuse component and a
view-dependent glossy term concentrated around the mirror reflection direction.
We design a convolutional network around input feature maps that facilitate
learning of an implicit representation of scene materials and illumination,
enabling both relighting and free-viewpoint navigation. We generate these input
maps by exploiting the best elements of both image-based and physically-based
rendering. We sample the input views to estimate diffuse scene irradiance, and
compute the new illumination caused by user-specified light sources using path
tracing. To facilitate the network's understanding of materials and synthesize
plausible glossy reflections, we reproject the views and compute mirror images.
We train the network on a synthetic dataset where each scene is also
reconstructed with MVS. We show results of our algorithm relighting real indoor
scenes and performing free-viewpoint navigation with complex and realistic
glossy reflections, which so far remained out of reach for view-synthesis
techniques
Multi-view Relighting using a Geometry-Aware Network
International audienceWe propose the first learning-based algorithm that can relight images in a plausible and controllable manner given multiple views of an outdoor scene. In particular, we introduce a geometry-aware neural network that utilizes multiple geometry cues (normal maps, specular direction, etc.) and source and target shadow masks computed from a noisy proxy geometry obtained by multi-view stereo. Our model is a three-stage pipeline: two subnetworks refine the source and target shadow masks, and a third performs the final relighting. Furthermore, we introduce a novel representation for the shadow masks, which we call RGB shadow images. They reproject the colors from all views into the shadowed pixels and enable our network to cope with inacuraccies in the proxy and the non-locality of the shadow casting interactions. Acquiring large-scale multi-view relighting datasets for real scenes is challenging, so we train our network on photorealistic synthetic data. At train time, we also compute a noisy stereo-based geometric proxy, this time from the synthetic renderings. This allows us to bridge the gap between the real and synthetic domains. Our model generalizes well to real scenes. It can alter the illumination of drone footage, image-based renderings, textured mesh reconstructions, and even internet photo collections
Multi-View Intrinsic Images of Outdoors Scenes with an Application to Relighting
International audienceInria We introduce a method to compute intrinsic images for a multi-view set of outdoor photos with cast shadows, taken under the same lighting. We use an automatic 3D reconstruction from these photos and the sun direction as input and decompose each image into reflectance and shading layers, despite the inaccuracies and missing data of the 3D model. Our approach is based on two key ideas. First, we progressively improve the accuracy of the parameters of our image formation model by performing iterative estimation and combining 3D lighting simulation with 2D image optimization methods. Second we use the image formation model to express reflectance as a function of discrete visibility values for shadow and light, which allows us to introduce a robust visibility classifier for pairs of points in a scene. This classifier is used for shadow labelling, allowing us to compute high quality reflectance and shading layers. Our multi-view intrinsic decomposition is of sufficient quality to allow relighting of the input images. We create shadow-caster geometry which preserves shadow silhouettes and using the intrinsic layers, we can perform multi-view relighting with moving cast shadows. We present results on several multi-view datasets, and show how it is now possible to perform image-based rendering with changing illumination conditions
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