3D multibodies

Fitting Sets of Plausible 3D Human Models to Ambiguous Image Data

NeurIPS 2020 Spotlight

Benjamin Biggs [1], Sébastien Ehrhart [2], Hanbyul Joo [3], Benjamin Graham [3], Andrea Vedaldi [3] and David Novotny [3]

[1] University of Cambridge, [2] University of Oxford, [3] Facebook AI Research, London

Abstract

We consider the problem of obtaining dense 3D reconstructions of humans from single and partially occluded views. In such cases, the visual evidence is usually insufficient to identify a 3D reconstruction uniquely, so we aim at recovering several plausible reconstructions compatible with the input data. We suggest that ambiguities can be modelled more effectively by parametrizing the possible body shapes and poses via a suitable 3D model, such as SMPL for humans. We propose to learn a multi-hypothesis neural network regressor using a best-of-M loss, where each of the M hypotheses is constrained to lie on a manifold of plausible human poses by means of a generative model. We show that our method outperforms alternative approaches in ambiguous pose recovery on standard benchmarks for 3D humans, and in heavily occluded versions of these benchmarks.

Cite us!

@inproceedings{biggs2020multibodies,

title={{3D} Multibodies: Fitting Sets of Plausible {3D} Models to Ambiguous Image Data},

author={Biggs, Benjamin and Ehrhart, S{\'{e}}bastien and Joo, Hanbyul and Graham, Benjamin and Vedaldi, Andrea and Novotny, David},

booktitle={NeurIPS},

year={2020}

}

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