We introduce RGB2Point, an unposed single-view RGB image to a 3D point cloud generation based on Transformer. RGB2Point takes an input image of an object and generates a dense 3D point cloud. Contrary to prior works based on CNN layers and diffusion-denoising approaches, we use pre-trained Transformer layers that are fast and generate high-quality point clouds with consistent quality over available categories. Our generated point clouds demonstrate high quality on a real-world dataset, as evidenced by improved Chamfer distance (51.15%) and Earth Mover’s distance (36.17%) metrics compared to the current state-of the-art. Additionally, our approach shows a better quality on a synthetic dataset, achieving better Chamfer distance (39.26%), Earth Mover’s distance (26.95%), and F-score (47.16%). Moreover, our method produces 63.1% more consistent high-quality results across various object categories compared to prior works. Furthermore, RGB2Point is computationally efficient, requiring only 2.3GB of VRAM to reconstruct a 3D point cloud from a single RGB image, and our implementation generates the results 15,133× faster than a SOTA diffusion-based model.
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A Cloud 3D Dataset and Application-Specific Learned Image Compression in Cloud 3D
In Cloud 3D, such as Cloud Gaming and Cloud Virtual Reality (VR), image frames are rendered and compressed (encoded) in the cloud, and sent to the clients for users to view. For low latency and high image quality, fast, high compression rate, and high-quality image compression techniques are preferable. This paper explores computation time reduction techniques for learned image compression to make it more suitable for cloud 3D. More specifically, we employed slim (low-complexity) and application-specific AI models to reduce the computation time without degrading image quality. Our approach is based on two key insights: (1) as the frames generated by a 3D application are highly homogeneous, application-specific compression models can improve the rate-distortion performance over a general model; (2) many computer-generated frames from 3D applications are less complex than natural photos, which makes it feasible to reduce the model complexity to accelerate compression computation. We evaluated our models on six gaming image datasets. The results show that our approach has similar rate-distortion performance as a state-of-the-art learned image compression algorithm, while obtaining about 5x to 9x speedup and reducing the compression time to be less than 1 s (0.74s), bringing learned image compression closer to being viable for cloud 3D. Code is available at https://github.com/cloud-graphics-rendering/AppSpecificLIC.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2221843
- PAR ID:
- 10411830
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- European Conference on Computer Vision (ECCV)
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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