3,276 research outputs found
SEGCloud: Semantic Segmentation of 3D Point Clouds
3D semantic scene labeling is fundamental to agents operating in the real
world. In particular, labeling raw 3D point sets from sensors provides
fine-grained semantics. Recent works leverage the capabilities of Neural
Networks (NNs), but are limited to coarse voxel predictions and do not
explicitly enforce global consistency. We present SEGCloud, an end-to-end
framework to obtain 3D point-level segmentation that combines the advantages of
NNs, trilinear interpolation(TI) and fully connected Conditional Random Fields
(FC-CRF). Coarse voxel predictions from a 3D Fully Convolutional NN are
transferred back to the raw 3D points via trilinear interpolation. Then the
FC-CRF enforces global consistency and provides fine-grained semantics on the
points. We implement the latter as a differentiable Recurrent NN to allow joint
optimization. We evaluate the framework on two indoor and two outdoor 3D
datasets (NYU V2, S3DIS, KITTI, Semantic3D.net), and show performance
comparable or superior to the state-of-the-art on all datasets.Comment: Accepted as a spotlight at the International Conference of 3D Vision
(3DV 2017
Two and three dimensional segmentation of multimodal imagery
The role of segmentation in the realms of image understanding/analysis, computer vision, pattern recognition, remote sensing and medical imaging in recent years has been significantly augmented due to accelerated scientific advances made in the acquisition of image data. This low-level analysis protocol is critical to numerous applications, with the primary goal of expediting and improving the effectiveness of subsequent high-level operations by providing a condensed and pertinent representation of image information. In this research, we propose a novel unsupervised segmentation framework for facilitating meaningful segregation of 2-D/3-D image data across multiple modalities (color, remote-sensing and biomedical imaging) into non-overlapping partitions using several spatial-spectral attributes. Initially, our framework exploits the information obtained from detecting edges inherent in the data. To this effect, by using a vector gradient detection technique, pixels without edges are grouped and individually labeled to partition some initial portion of the input image content. Pixels that contain higher gradient densities are included by the dynamic generation of segments as the algorithm progresses to generate an initial region map. Subsequently, texture modeling is performed and the obtained gradient, texture and intensity information along with the aforementioned initial partition map are used to perform a multivariate refinement procedure, to fuse groups with similar characteristics yielding the final output segmentation. Experimental results obtained in comparison to published/state-of the-art segmentation techniques for color as well as multi/hyperspectral imagery, demonstrate the advantages of the proposed method. Furthermore, for the purpose of achieving improved computational efficiency we propose an extension of the aforestated methodology in a multi-resolution framework, demonstrated on color images. Finally, this research also encompasses a 3-D extension of the aforementioned algorithm demonstrated on medical (Magnetic Resonance Imaging / Computed Tomography) volumes
Personalized Cinemagraphs using Semantic Understanding and Collaborative Learning
Cinemagraphs are a compelling way to convey dynamic aspects of a scene. In
these media, dynamic and still elements are juxtaposed to create an artistic
and narrative experience. Creating a high-quality, aesthetically pleasing
cinemagraph requires isolating objects in a semantically meaningful way and
then selecting good start times and looping periods for those objects to
minimize visual artifacts (such a tearing). To achieve this, we present a new
technique that uses object recognition and semantic segmentation as part of an
optimization method to automatically create cinemagraphs from videos that are
both visually appealing and semantically meaningful. Given a scene with
multiple objects, there are many cinemagraphs one could create. Our method
evaluates these multiple candidates and presents the best one, as determined by
a model trained to predict human preferences in a collaborative way. We
demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach with multiple results and a user
study.Comment: To appear in ICCV 2017. Total 17 pages including the supplementary
materia
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