34,390 research outputs found
From Stereogram to Surface: How the Brain Sees the World in Depth
When we look at a scene, how do we consciously see surfaces infused with lightness and color at the correct depths? Random Dot Stereograms (RDS) probe how binocular disparity between the two eyes can generate such conscious surface percepts. Dense RDS do so despite the fact that they include multiple false binocular matches. Sparse stereograms do so even across large contrast-free regions with no binocular matches. Stereograms that define occluding and occluded surfaces lead to surface percepts wherein partially occluded textured surfaces are completed behind occluding textured surfaces at a spatial scale much larger than that of the texture elements themselves. Earlier models suggest how the brain detects binocular disparity, but not how RDS generate conscious percepts of 3D surfaces. A neural model predicts how the layered circuits of visual cortex generate these 3D surface percepts using interactions between visual boundary and surface representations that obey complementary computational rules.Air Force Office of Scientific Research (F49620-01-1-0397); National Science Foundation (EIA-01-30851, SBE-0354378); Office of Naval Research (N00014-01-1-0624
Deep Depth Completion of a Single RGB-D Image
The goal of our work is to complete the depth channel of an RGB-D image.
Commodity-grade depth cameras often fail to sense depth for shiny, bright,
transparent, and distant surfaces. To address this problem, we train a deep
network that takes an RGB image as input and predicts dense surface normals and
occlusion boundaries. Those predictions are then combined with raw depth
observations provided by the RGB-D camera to solve for depths for all pixels,
including those missing in the original observation. This method was chosen
over others (e.g., inpainting depths directly) as the result of extensive
experiments with a new depth completion benchmark dataset, where holes are
filled in training data through the rendering of surface reconstructions
created from multiview RGB-D scans. Experiments with different network inputs,
depth representations, loss functions, optimization methods, inpainting
methods, and deep depth estimation networks show that our proposed approach
provides better depth completions than these alternatives.Comment: Accepted by CVPR2018 (Spotlight). Project webpage:
http://deepcompletion.cs.princeton.edu/ This version includes supplementary
materials which provide more implementation details, quantitative evaluation,
and qualitative results. Due to file size limit, please check project website
for high-res pape
Learning Manipulation under Physics Constraints with Visual Perception
Understanding physical phenomena is a key competence that enables humans and
animals to act and interact under uncertain perception in previously unseen
environments containing novel objects and their configurations. In this work,
we consider the problem of autonomous block stacking and explore solutions to
learning manipulation under physics constraints with visual perception inherent
to the task. Inspired by the intuitive physics in humans, we first present an
end-to-end learning-based approach to predict stability directly from
appearance, contrasting a more traditional model-based approach with explicit
3D representations and physical simulation. We study the model's behavior
together with an accompanied human subject test. It is then integrated into a
real-world robotic system to guide the placement of a single wood block into
the scene without collapsing existing tower structure. To further automate the
process of consecutive blocks stacking, we present an alternative approach
where the model learns the physics constraint through the interaction with the
environment, bypassing the dedicated physics learning as in the former part of
this work. In particular, we are interested in the type of tasks that require
the agent to reach a given goal state that may be different for every new
trial. Thereby we propose a deep reinforcement learning framework that learns
policies for stacking tasks which are parametrized by a target structure.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1609.04861,
arXiv:1711.00267, arXiv:1604.0006
Learning Manipulation under Physics Constraints with Visual Perception
Understanding physical phenomena is a key competence that enables humans and animals to act and interact under uncertain perception in previously unseen environments containing novel objects and their configurations. In this work, we consider the problem of autonomous block stacking and explore solutions to learning manipulation under physics constraints with visual perception inherent to the task. Inspired by the intuitive physics in humans, we first present an end-to-end learning-based approach to predict stability directly from appearance, contrasting a more traditional model-based approach with explicit 3D representations and physical simulation. We study the model's behavior together with an accompanied human subject test. It is then integrated into a real-world robotic system to guide the placement of a single wood block into the scene without collapsing existing tower structure. To further automate the process of consecutive blocks stacking, we present an alternative approach where the model learns the physics constraint through the interaction with the environment, bypassing the dedicated physics learning as in the former part of this work. In particular, we are interested in the type of tasks that require the agent to reach a given goal state that may be different for every new trial. Thereby we propose a deep reinforcement learning framework that learns policies for stacking tasks which are parametrized by a target structure
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