Dense optical flow estimation is complex and time consuming, with state-of-the-art methods relying either on large synthetic data sets or on pipelines requiring up to a few minutes per frame pair. In this paper, we address the problem of optical flow estimation in the automotive scenario in a self-supervised manner. We argue that optical flow can be cast as a geometrical warping between two successive video frames and devise a deep architecture to estimate such transformation in two stages. First, a dense pixel-level flow is computed with a projective bootstrap on rigid surfaces. We show how such global transformation can be approximated with a homography and extend spatial transformer layers so that they can be employed to compute the flow field implied by such transformation. Subsequently, we refine the prediction by feeding a second, deeper network that accounts for moving objects. A final reconstruction loss compares the warping of frame Xₜ with the subsequent frame Xₜ₊₁ and guides both estimates. The model has the speed advantages of end-to-end deep architectures while achieving competitive performances, both outperforming recent unsupervised methods and showing good generalization capabilities on new automotive data sets.

Self-Supervised Optical Flow Estimation by Projective Bootstrap / Alletto, Stefano; Abati, Davide; Calderara, Simone; Cucchiara, Rita; Rigazio, Luca. - In: IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS. - ISSN 1524-9050. - 20:9(2019), pp. 3294-3302. [10.1109/TITS.2018.2873980]

Self-Supervised Optical Flow Estimation by Projective Bootstrap

Alletto, Stefano;Abati, Davide;Calderara, Simone;Cucchiara, Rita;
2019

Abstract

Dense optical flow estimation is complex and time consuming, with state-of-the-art methods relying either on large synthetic data sets or on pipelines requiring up to a few minutes per frame pair. In this paper, we address the problem of optical flow estimation in the automotive scenario in a self-supervised manner. We argue that optical flow can be cast as a geometrical warping between two successive video frames and devise a deep architecture to estimate such transformation in two stages. First, a dense pixel-level flow is computed with a projective bootstrap on rigid surfaces. We show how such global transformation can be approximated with a homography and extend spatial transformer layers so that they can be employed to compute the flow field implied by such transformation. Subsequently, we refine the prediction by feeding a second, deeper network that accounts for moving objects. A final reconstruction loss compares the warping of frame Xₜ with the subsequent frame Xₜ₊₁ and guides both estimates. The model has the speed advantages of end-to-end deep architectures while achieving competitive performances, both outperforming recent unsupervised methods and showing good generalization capabilities on new automotive data sets.
2019
24-ott-2018
20
9
3294
3302
Self-Supervised Optical Flow Estimation by Projective Bootstrap / Alletto, Stefano; Abati, Davide; Calderara, Simone; Cucchiara, Rita; Rigazio, Luca. - In: IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS. - ISSN 1524-9050. - 20:9(2019), pp. 3294-3302. [10.1109/TITS.2018.2873980]
Alletto, Stefano; Abati, Davide; Calderara, Simone; Cucchiara, Rita; Rigazio, Luca
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11380/1167357
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