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Hauptverfasser: Li, Yiming, Wang, Zehong, Wang, Yue, Yu, Zhiding, Gojcic, Zan, Pavone, Marco, Feng, Chen, Alvarez, Jose M.
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2024
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.17187
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author Li, Yiming
Wang, Zehong
Wang, Yue
Yu, Zhiding
Gojcic, Zan
Pavone, Marco
Feng, Chen
Alvarez, Jose M.
author_facet Li, Yiming
Wang, Zehong
Wang, Yue
Yu, Zhiding
Gojcic, Zan
Pavone, Marco
Feng, Chen
Alvarez, Jose M.
contents Humans naturally retain memories of permanent elements, while ephemeral moments often slip through the cracks of memory. This selective retention is crucial for robotic perception, localization, and mapping. To endow robots with this capability, we introduce 3D Gaussian Mapping (3DGM), a self-supervised, camera-only offline mapping framework grounded in 3D Gaussian Splatting. 3DGM converts multitraverse RGB videos from the same region into a Gaussian-based environmental map while concurrently performing 2D ephemeral object segmentation. Our key observation is that the environment remains consistent across traversals, while objects frequently change. This allows us to exploit self-supervision from repeated traversals to achieve environment-object decomposition. More specifically, 3DGM formulates multitraverse environmental mapping as a robust differentiable rendering problem, treating pixels of the environment and objects as inliers and outliers, respectively. Using robust feature distillation, feature residuals mining, and robust optimization, 3DGM jointly performs 2D segmentation and 3D mapping without human intervention. We build the Mapverse benchmark, sourced from the Ithaca365 and nuPlan datasets, to evaluate our method in unsupervised 2D segmentation, 3D reconstruction, and neural rendering. Extensive results verify the effectiveness and potential of our method for self-driving and robotics.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2405_17187
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Memorize What Matters: Emergent Scene Decomposition from Multitraverse
Li, Yiming
Wang, Zehong
Wang, Yue
Yu, Zhiding
Gojcic, Zan
Pavone, Marco
Feng, Chen
Alvarez, Jose M.
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Artificial Intelligence
Robotics
Humans naturally retain memories of permanent elements, while ephemeral moments often slip through the cracks of memory. This selective retention is crucial for robotic perception, localization, and mapping. To endow robots with this capability, we introduce 3D Gaussian Mapping (3DGM), a self-supervised, camera-only offline mapping framework grounded in 3D Gaussian Splatting. 3DGM converts multitraverse RGB videos from the same region into a Gaussian-based environmental map while concurrently performing 2D ephemeral object segmentation. Our key observation is that the environment remains consistent across traversals, while objects frequently change. This allows us to exploit self-supervision from repeated traversals to achieve environment-object decomposition. More specifically, 3DGM formulates multitraverse environmental mapping as a robust differentiable rendering problem, treating pixels of the environment and objects as inliers and outliers, respectively. Using robust feature distillation, feature residuals mining, and robust optimization, 3DGM jointly performs 2D segmentation and 3D mapping without human intervention. We build the Mapverse benchmark, sourced from the Ithaca365 and nuPlan datasets, to evaluate our method in unsupervised 2D segmentation, 3D reconstruction, and neural rendering. Extensive results verify the effectiveness and potential of our method for self-driving and robotics.
title Memorize What Matters: Emergent Scene Decomposition from Multitraverse
topic Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Artificial Intelligence
Robotics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.17187