2,988 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
Point-wise Map Recovery and Refinement from Functional Correspondence
Since their introduction in the shape analysis community, functional maps
have met with considerable success due to their ability to compactly represent
dense correspondences between deformable shapes, with applications ranging from
shape matching and image segmentation, to exploration of large shape
collections. Despite the numerous advantages of such representation, however,
the problem of converting a given functional map back to a point-to-point map
has received a surprisingly limited interest. In this paper we analyze the
general problem of point-wise map recovery from arbitrary functional maps. In
doing so, we rule out many of the assumptions required by the currently
established approach -- most notably, the limiting requirement of the input
shapes being nearly-isometric. We devise an efficient recovery process based on
a simple probabilistic model. Experiments confirm that this approach achieves
remarkable accuracy improvements in very challenging cases
Regularized pointwise map recovery from functional correspondence
The concept of using functional maps for representing dense correspondences between deformable shapes has proven to be extremely effective in many applications. However, despite the impact of this framework, the problem of recovering the point-to-point correspondence from a given functional map has received surprisingly little interest. In this paper, we analyse the aforementioned problem and propose a novel method for reconstructing pointwise correspondences from a given functional map. The proposed algorithm phrases the matching problem as a regularized alignment problem of the spectral embeddings of the two shapes. Opposed to established methods, our approach does not require the input shapes to be nearly-isometric, and easily extends to recovering the point-to-point correspondence in part-to-whole shape matching problems. Our numerical experiments demonstrate that the proposed approach leads to a significant improvement in accuracy in several challenging cases
A Low-Dimensional Representation for Robust Partial Isometric Correspondences Computation
Intrinsic isometric shape matching has become the standard approach for pose
invariant correspondence estimation among deformable shapes. Most existing
approaches assume global consistency, i.e., the metric structure of the whole
manifold must not change significantly. While global isometric matching is well
understood, only a few heuristic solutions are known for partial matching.
Partial matching is particularly important for robustness to topological noise
(incomplete data and contacts), which is a common problem in real-world 3D
scanner data. In this paper, we introduce a new approach to partial, intrinsic
isometric matching. Our method is based on the observation that isometries are
fully determined by purely local information: a map of a single point and its
tangent space fixes an isometry for both global and the partial maps. From this
idea, we develop a new representation for partial isometric maps based on
equivalence classes of correspondences between pairs of points and their
tangent spaces. From this, we derive a local propagation algorithm that find
such mappings efficiently. In contrast to previous heuristics based on RANSAC
or expectation maximization, our method is based on a simple and sound
theoretical model and fully deterministic. We apply our approach to register
partial point clouds and compare it to the state-of-the-art methods, where we
obtain significant improvements over global methods for real-world data and
stronger guarantees than previous heuristic partial matching algorithms.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figure
Morphing of Triangular Meshes in Shape Space
We present a novel approach to morph between two isometric poses of the same
non-rigid object given as triangular meshes. We model the morphs as linear
interpolations in a suitable shape space . For triangulated 3D
polygons, we prove that interpolating linearly in this shape space corresponds
to the most isometric morph in . We then extend this shape space
to arbitrary triangulations in 3D using a heuristic approach and show the
practical use of the approach using experiments. Furthermore, we discuss a
modified shape space that is useful for isometric skeleton morphing. All of the
newly presented approaches solve the morphing problem without the need to solve
a minimization problem.Comment: Improved experimental result
SHREC'16: partial matching of deformable shapes
Matching deformable 3D shapes under partiality transformations is a challenging problem that has received limited focus in the computer vision and graphics communities. With this benchmark, we explore and thoroughly investigate the robustness of existing matching methods in this challenging task. Participants are asked to provide a point-to-point correspondence (either sparse or dense) between deformable shapes undergoing different kinds of partiality transformations, resulting in a total of 400 matching problems to be solved for each method - making this benchmark the biggest and most challenging of its kind. Five matching algorithms were evaluated in the contest; this paper presents the details of the dataset, the adopted evaluation measures, and shows thorough comparisons among all competing methods
- …