1,031 research outputs found
Learning shape correspondence with anisotropic convolutional neural networks
Establishing correspondence between shapes is a fundamental problem in
geometry processing, arising in a wide variety of applications. The problem is
especially difficult in the setting of non-isometric deformations, as well as
in the presence of topological noise and missing parts, mainly due to the
limited capability to model such deformations axiomatically. Several recent
works showed that invariance to complex shape transformations can be learned
from examples. In this paper, we introduce an intrinsic convolutional neural
network architecture based on anisotropic diffusion kernels, which we term
Anisotropic Convolutional Neural Network (ACNN). In our construction, we
generalize convolutions to non-Euclidean domains by constructing a set of
oriented anisotropic diffusion kernels, creating in this way a local intrinsic
polar representation of the data (`patch'), which is then correlated with a
filter. Several cascades of such filters, linear, and non-linear operators are
stacked to form a deep neural network whose parameters are learned by
minimizing a task-specific cost. We use ACNNs to effectively learn intrinsic
dense correspondences between deformable shapes in very challenging settings,
achieving state-of-the-art results on some of the most difficult recent
correspondence benchmarks
Surface Networks
We study data-driven representations for three-dimensional triangle meshes,
which are one of the prevalent objects used to represent 3D geometry. Recent
works have developed models that exploit the intrinsic geometry of manifolds
and graphs, namely the Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) and its spectral variants,
which learn from the local metric tensor via the Laplacian operator. Despite
offering excellent sample complexity and built-in invariances, intrinsic
geometry alone is invariant to isometric deformations, making it unsuitable for
many applications. To overcome this limitation, we propose several upgrades to
GNNs to leverage extrinsic differential geometry properties of
three-dimensional surfaces, increasing its modeling power.
In particular, we propose to exploit the Dirac operator, whose spectrum
detects principal curvature directions --- this is in stark contrast with the
classical Laplace operator, which directly measures mean curvature. We coin the
resulting models \emph{Surface Networks (SN)}. We prove that these models
define shape representations that are stable to deformation and to
discretization, and we demonstrate the efficiency and versatility of SNs on two
challenging tasks: temporal prediction of mesh deformations under non-linear
dynamics and generative models using a variational autoencoder framework with
encoders/decoders given by SNs
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