193 research outputs found

    Depth-Assisted Semantic Segmentation, Image Enhancement and Parametric Modeling

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    This dissertation addresses the problem of employing 3D depth information on solving a number of traditional challenging computer vision/graphics problems. Humans have the abilities of perceiving the depth information in 3D world, which enable humans to reconstruct layouts, recognize objects and understand the geometric space and semantic meanings of the visual world. Therefore it is significant to explore how the 3D depth information can be utilized by computer vision systems to mimic such abilities of humans. This dissertation aims at employing 3D depth information to solve vision/graphics problems in the following aspects: scene understanding, image enhancements and 3D reconstruction and modeling. In addressing scene understanding problem, we present a framework for semantic segmentation and object recognition on urban video sequence only using dense depth maps recovered from the video. Five view-independent 3D features that vary with object class are extracted from dense depth maps and used for segmenting and recognizing different object classes in street scene images. We demonstrate a scene parsing algorithm that uses only dense 3D depth information to outperform using sparse 3D or 2D appearance features. In addressing image enhancement problem, we present a framework to overcome the imperfections of personal photographs of tourist sites using the rich information provided by large-scale internet photo collections (IPCs). By augmenting personal 2D images with 3D information reconstructed from IPCs, we address a number of traditionally challenging image enhancement techniques and achieve high-quality results using simple and robust algorithms. In addressing 3D reconstruction and modeling problem, we focus on parametric modeling of flower petals, the most distinctive part of a plant. The complex structure, severe occlusions and wide variations make the reconstruction of their 3D models a challenging task. We overcome these challenges by combining data driven modeling techniques with domain knowledge from botany. Taking a 3D point cloud of an input flower scanned from a single view, each segmented petal is fitted with a scale-invariant morphable petal shape model, which is constructed from individually scanned 3D exemplar petals. Novel constraints based on botany studies are incorporated into the fitting process for realistically reconstructing occluded regions and maintaining correct 3D spatial relations. The main contribution of the dissertation is in the intelligent usage of 3D depth information on solving traditional challenging vision/graphics problems. By developing some advanced algorithms either automatically or with minimum user interaction, the goal of this dissertation is to demonstrate that computed 3D depth behind the multiple images contains rich information of the visual world and therefore can be intelligently utilized to recognize/ understand semantic meanings of scenes, efficiently enhance and augment single 2D images, and reconstruct high-quality 3D models

    3D Reconstruction of 'In-the-Wild' Faces in Images and Videos

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from IEEE via the DOI in this record 3D Morphable Models (3DMMs) are powerful statistical models of 3D facial shape and texture, and are among the state-of-the-art methods for reconstructing facial shape from single images. With the advent of new 3D sensors, many 3D facial datasets have been collected containing both neutral as well as expressive faces. However, all datasets are captured under controlled conditions. Thus, even though powerful 3D facial shape models can be learnt from such data, it is difficult to build statistical texture models that are sufficient to reconstruct faces captured in unconstrained conditions ('in-the-wild'). In this paper, we propose the first 'in-the-wild' 3DMM by combining a statistical model of facial identity and expression shape with an 'in-the-wild' texture model. We show that such an approach allows for the development of a greatly simplified fitting procedure for images and videos, as there is no need to optimise with regards to the illumination parameters. We have collected three new benchmarks that combine 'in-the-wild' images and video with ground truth 3D facial geometry, the first of their kind, and report extensive quantitative evaluations using them that demonstrate our method is state-of-the-art.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC

    3D Human Face Reconstruction and 2D Appearance Synthesis

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    3D human face reconstruction has been an extensive research for decades due to its wide applications, such as animation, recognition and 3D-driven appearance synthesis. Although commodity depth sensors are widely available in recent years, image based face reconstruction are significantly valuable as images are much easier to access and store. In this dissertation, we first propose three image-based face reconstruction approaches according to different assumption of inputs. In the first approach, face geometry is extracted from multiple key frames of a video sequence with different head poses. The camera should be calibrated under this assumption. As the first approach is limited to videos, we propose the second approach then focus on single image. This approach also improves the geometry by adding fine grains using shading cue. We proposed a novel albedo estimation and linear optimization algorithm in this approach. In the third approach, we further loose the constraint of the input image to arbitrary in the wild images. Our proposed approach can robustly reconstruct high quality model even with extreme expressions and large poses. We then explore the applicability of our face reconstructions on four interesting applications: video face beautification, generating personalized facial blendshape from image sequences, face video stylizing and video face replacement. We demonstrate great potentials of our reconstruction approaches on these real-world applications. In particular, with the recent surge of interests in VR/AR, it is increasingly common to see people wearing head-mounted displays. However, the large occlusion on face is a big obstacle for people to communicate in a face-to-face manner. Our another application is that we explore hardware/software solutions for synthesizing the face image with presence of HMDs. We design two setups (experimental and mobile) which integrate two near IR cameras and one color camera to solve this problem. With our algorithm and prototype, we can achieve photo-realistic results. We further propose a deep neutral network to solve the HMD removal problem considering it as a face inpainting problem. This approach doesn\u27t need special hardware and run in real-time with satisfying results

    {3D} Morphable Face Models -- Past, Present and Future

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    In this paper, we provide a detailed survey of 3D Morphable Face Models over the 20 years since they were first proposed. The challenges in building and applying these models, namely capture, modeling, image formation, and image analysis, are still active research topics, and we review the state-of-the-art in each of these areas. We also look ahead, identifying unsolved challenges, proposing directions for future research and highlighting the broad range of current and future applications

    Synthesization and reconstruction of 3D faces by deep neural networks

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    The past few decades have witnessed substantial progress towards 3D facial modelling and reconstruction as it is high importance for many computer vision and graphics applications including Augmented/Virtual Reality (AR/VR), computer games, movie post-production, image/video editing, medical applications, etc. In the traditional approaches, facial texture and shape are represented as triangle mesh that can cover identity and expression variation with non-rigid deformation. A dataset of 3D face scans is then densely registered into a common topology in order to construct a linear statistical model. Such models are called 3D Morphable Models (3DMMs) and can be used for 3D face synthesization or reconstruction by a single or few 2D face images. The works presented in this thesis focus on the modernization of these traditional techniques in the light of recent advances of deep learning and thanks to the availability of large-scale datasets. Ever since the introduction of 3DMMs by over two decades, there has been a lot of progress on it and they are still considered as one of the best methodologies to model 3D faces. Nevertheless, there are still several aspects of it that need to be upgraded to the "deep era". Firstly, the conventional 3DMMs are built by linear statistical approaches such as Principal Component Analysis (PCA) which omits high-frequency information by its nature. While this does not curtail shape, which is often smooth in the original data, texture models are heavily afflicted by losing high-frequency details and photorealism. Secondly, the existing 3DMM fitting approaches rely on very primitive (i.e. RGB values, sparse landmarks) or hand-crafted features (i.e. HOG, SIFT) as supervision that are sensitive to "in-the-wild" images (i.e. lighting, pose, occlusion), or somewhat missing identity/expression resemblance with the target image. Finally, shape, texture, and expression modalities are separately modelled by ignoring the correlation among them, placing a fundamental limit to the synthesization of semantically meaningful 3D faces. Moreover, photorealistic 3D face synthesis has not been studied thoroughly in the literature. This thesis attempts to address the above-mentioned issues by harnessing the power of deep neural network and generative adversarial networks as explained below: Due to the linear texture models, many of the state-of-the-art methods are still not capable of reconstructing facial textures with high-frequency details. For this, we take a radically different approach and build a high-quality texture model by Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) that preserves details. That is, we utilize GANs to train a very powerful generator of facial texture in the UV space. And then show that it is possible to employ this generator network as a statistical texture prior to 3DMM fitting. The resulting texture reconstructions are plausible and photorealistic as GANs are faithful to the real-data distribution in both low- and high- frequency domains. Then, we revisit the conventional 3DMM fitting approaches making use of non-linear optimization to find the optimal latent parameters that best reconstruct the test image but under a new perspective. We propose to optimize the parameters with the supervision of pretrained deep identity features through our end-to-end differentiable framework. In order to be robust towards initialization and expedite the fitting process, we also propose a novel self-supervised regression-based approach. We demonstrate excellent 3D face reconstructions that are photorealistic and identity preserving and achieve for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, facial texture reconstruction with high-frequency details. In order to extend the non-linear texture model for photo-realistic 3D face synthesis, we present a methodology that generates high-quality texture, shape, and normals jointly. To do so, we propose a novel GAN that can generate data from different modalities while exploiting their correlations. Furthermore, we demonstrate how we can condition the generation on the expression and create faces with various facial expressions. Additionally, we study another approach for photo-realistic face synthesis by 3D guidance. This study proposes to generate 3D faces by linear 3DMM and then augment their 2D rendering by an image-to-image translation network to the photorealistic face domain. Both works demonstrate excellent photorealistic face synthesis and show that the generated faces are improving face recognition benchmarks as synthetic training data. Finally, we study expression reconstruction for personalized 3D face models where we improve generalization and robustness of expression encoding. First, we propose a 3D augmentation approach on 2D head-mounted camera images to increase robustness to perspective changes. And, we also propose to train generic expression encoder network by populating the number of identities with a novel multi-id personalized model training architecture in a self-supervised manner. Both approaches show promising results in both qualitative and quantitative experiments.Open Acces
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