All-day Depth Completion

May 27, 2024ยท
Vadim Ezhov
Equal contribution
,
Hyoungseob Park
Equal contribution
Zhaoyang Zhang
Zhaoyang Zhang
Equal contribution
,
Rishi Upadhyay
,
Howard Zhang
,
Chethan Chinder Chandrappa
,
Achuta Kadambi
,
Yunhao Ba
Julie Dorsey
Julie Dorsey
Alex Wong
Alex Wong
ยท 0 min read
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Abstract
We propose a method for depth estimation under different illumination conditions, i.e., day and night time. As photometry is uninformative in regions under low-illumination, we tackle the problem through a multi-sensor fusion approach, where we take as input an additional synchronized sparse point cloud (i.e., from a LiDAR) projected onto the image plane as a sparse depth map, along with a camera image. The crux of our method lies in the use of the abundantly available synthetic data to first approximate the 3D scene structure by learning a mapping from sparse to (coarse) dense depth maps along with their predictive uncertainty - we term this, SpaDe. In poorly illuminated regions where photometric intensities do not afford the inference of local shape, the coarse approximation of scene depth serves as a prior; the uncertainty map is then used with the image to guide refinement through an uncertainty-driven residual learning (URL) scheme. The resulting depth completion network leverages complementary strengths from both modalities - depth is sparse but insensitive to illumination and in metric scale, and image is dense but sensitive with scale ambiguity. SpaDe can be used in a plug-and-play fashion, which allows for 25% improvement when augmented onto existing methods to preprocess sparse depth. We demonstrate URL on the nuScenes dataset where we improve over all baselines by an average 11.65% in all-day scenarios, 11.23% when tested specifically for daytime, and 13.12% for nighttime scenes.
Type
Publication
In IROS 2024
Zhaoyang Zhang
Authors
Ph.D. Student in Computer Graphics
Julie Dorsey
Authors
Julie Dorsey
Frederick W. Beinecke Professor of Computer Science
Alex Wong
Authors
Alex Wong
Assistant Professor of Computer Science