Learning Rigidity in Dynamic Scenes with a Moving Camera for 3D Motion Field Estimation

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Abstract

Estimation of 3D motion in a dynamic scene from a temporal pair of images is a core task in many scene understanding problems. In real-world applications, a dynamic scene is commonly captured by a moving camera (i.e., panning, tilting or hand-held), increasing the task complexity because the scene is observed from different viewpoints. The primary challenge is the disambiguation of the camera motion from scene motion, which becomes more difficult as the amount of rigidity observed decreases, even with successful estimation of 2D image correspondences. Compared to other state-of-the-art 3D scene flow estimation methods, in this paper, we propose to learn the rigidity of a scene in a supervised manner from an extensive collection of dynamic scene data, and directly infer a rigidity mask from two sequential images with depths. With the learned network, we show how we can effectively estimate camera motion and projected scene flow using computed 2D optical flow and the inferred rigidity mask. For training and testing the rigidity network, we also provide a new semi-synthetic dynamic scene dataset (synthetic foreground objects with a real background) and an evaluation split that accounts for the percentage of observed non-rigid pixels. Through our evaluation, we show the proposed framework outperforms current state-of-the-art scene flow estimation methods in challenging dynamic scenes.

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APA

Lv, Z., Kim, K., Troccoli, A., Sun, D., Rehg, J. M., & Kautz, J. (2018). Learning Rigidity in Dynamic Scenes with a Moving Camera for 3D Motion Field Estimation. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 11209 LNCS, pp. 484–501). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-01228-1_29

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