3 research outputs found

    Depth estimation from monocular images

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    This work will focus on studying different deep learning architectures for obtaining depth information from monocular RGB images.During this project, state-of-the-art deep learning models have been used to estimate depth maps from a monocular RGB image applying a teacher-student learning approach. This paradigm has been used in order to distillate the knowledge of high capacity deep neural networks into shallower ones to make inference faster for real-time applications. Some successful applications of this technique can be found both at natural language and computer vision applications

    Learning to Generate 3D Training Data

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    Human-level visual 3D perception ability has long been pursued by researchers in computer vision, computer graphics, and robotics. Recent years have seen an emerging line of works using synthetic images to train deep networks for single image 3D perception. Synthetic images rendered by graphics engines are a promising source for training deep neural networks because it comes with perfect 3D ground truth for free. However, the 3D shapes and scenes to be rendered are largely made manual. Besides, it is challenging to ensure that synthetic images collected this way can help train a deep network to perform well on real images. This is because graphics generation pipelines require numerous design decisions such as the selection of 3D shapes and the placement of the camera. In this dissertation, we propose automatic generation pipelines of synthetic data that aim to improve the task performance of a trained network. We explore both supervised and unsupervised directions for automatic optimization of 3D decisions. For supervised learning, we demonstrate how to optimize 3D parameters such that a trained network can generalize well to real images. We first show that we can construct a pure synthetic 3D shape to achieve state-of-the-art performance on a shape-from-shading benchmark. We further parameterize the decisions as a vector and propose a hybrid gradient approach to efficiently optimize the vector towards usefulness. Our hybrid gradient is able to outperform classic black-box approaches on a wide selection of 3D perception tasks. For unsupervised learning, we propose a novelty metric for 3D parameter evolution based on deep autoregressive models. We show that without any extrinsic motivation, the novelty computed from autoregressive models alone is helpful. Our novelty metric can consistently encourage a random synthetic generator to produce more useful training data for downstream 3D perception tasks.PHDComputer Science & EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/163240/1/ydawei_1.pd
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