6,016 research outputs found
A Synergistic Approach for Recovering Occlusion-Free Textured 3D Maps of Urban Facades from Heterogeneous Cartographic Data
In this paper we present a practical approach for generating an
occlusion-free textured 3D map of urban facades by the synergistic use of
terrestrial images, 3D point clouds and area-based information. Particularly in
dense urban environments, the high presence of urban objects in front of the
facades causes significant difficulties for several stages in computational
building modeling. Major challenges lie on the one hand in extracting complete
3D facade quadrilateral delimitations and on the other hand in generating
occlusion-free facade textures. For these reasons, we describe a
straightforward approach for completing and recovering facade geometry and
textures by exploiting the data complementarity of terrestrial multi-source
imagery and area-based information
Robust Temporally Coherent Laplacian Protrusion Segmentation of 3D Articulated Bodies
In motion analysis and understanding it is important to be able to fit a
suitable model or structure to the temporal series of observed data, in order
to describe motion patterns in a compact way, and to discriminate between them.
In an unsupervised context, i.e., no prior model of the moving object(s) is
available, such a structure has to be learned from the data in a bottom-up
fashion. In recent times, volumetric approaches in which the motion is captured
from a number of cameras and a voxel-set representation of the body is built
from the camera views, have gained ground due to attractive features such as
inherent view-invariance and robustness to occlusions. Automatic, unsupervised
segmentation of moving bodies along entire sequences, in a temporally-coherent
and robust way, has the potential to provide a means of constructing a
bottom-up model of the moving body, and track motion cues that may be later
exploited for motion classification. Spectral methods such as locally linear
embedding (LLE) can be useful in this context, as they preserve "protrusions",
i.e., high-curvature regions of the 3D volume, of articulated shapes, while
improving their separation in a lower dimensional space, making them in this
way easier to cluster. In this paper we therefore propose a spectral approach
to unsupervised and temporally-coherent body-protrusion segmentation along time
sequences. Volumetric shapes are clustered in an embedding space, clusters are
propagated in time to ensure coherence, and merged or split to accommodate
changes in the body's topology. Experiments on both synthetic and real
sequences of dense voxel-set data are shown. This supports the ability of the
proposed method to cluster body-parts consistently over time in a totally
unsupervised fashion, its robustness to sampling density and shape quality, and
its potential for bottom-up model constructionComment: 31 pages, 26 figure
Competitive Collaboration: Joint Unsupervised Learning of Depth, Camera Motion, Optical Flow and Motion Segmentation
We address the unsupervised learning of several interconnected problems in
low-level vision: single view depth prediction, camera motion estimation,
optical flow, and segmentation of a video into the static scene and moving
regions. Our key insight is that these four fundamental vision problems are
coupled through geometric constraints. Consequently, learning to solve them
together simplifies the problem because the solutions can reinforce each other.
We go beyond previous work by exploiting geometry more explicitly and
segmenting the scene into static and moving regions. To that end, we introduce
Competitive Collaboration, a framework that facilitates the coordinated
training of multiple specialized neural networks to solve complex problems.
Competitive Collaboration works much like expectation-maximization, but with
neural networks that act as both competitors to explain pixels that correspond
to static or moving regions, and as collaborators through a moderator that
assigns pixels to be either static or independently moving. Our novel method
integrates all these problems in a common framework and simultaneously reasons
about the segmentation of the scene into moving objects and the static
background, the camera motion, depth of the static scene structure, and the
optical flow of moving objects. Our model is trained without any supervision
and achieves state-of-the-art performance among joint unsupervised methods on
all sub-problems.Comment: CVPR 201
Unsupervised Object Discovery and Tracking in Video Collections
This paper addresses the problem of automatically localizing dominant objects
as spatio-temporal tubes in a noisy collection of videos with minimal or even
no supervision. We formulate the problem as a combination of two complementary
processes: discovery and tracking. The first one establishes correspondences
between prominent regions across videos, and the second one associates
successive similar object regions within the same video. Interestingly, our
algorithm also discovers the implicit topology of frames associated with
instances of the same object class across different videos, a role normally
left to supervisory information in the form of class labels in conventional
image and video understanding methods. Indeed, as demonstrated by our
experiments, our method can handle video collections featuring multiple object
classes, and substantially outperforms the state of the art in colocalization,
even though it tackles a broader problem with much less supervision
Robust Motion Segmentation from Pairwise Matches
In this paper we address a classification problem that has not been
considered before, namely motion segmentation given pairwise matches only. Our
contribution to this unexplored task is a novel formulation of motion
segmentation as a two-step process. First, motion segmentation is performed on
image pairs independently. Secondly, we combine independent pairwise
segmentation results in a robust way into the final globally consistent
segmentation. Our approach is inspired by the success of averaging methods. We
demonstrate in simulated as well as in real experiments that our method is very
effective in reducing the errors in the pairwise motion segmentation and can
cope with large number of mismatches
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