PJ Narayanan

CV
3papers
75citations
Novelty53%
AI Score26

3 Papers

CVDec 27, 2022
Interactive Segmentation of Radiance Fields

Rahul Goel, Dhawal Sirikonda, Saurabh Saini et al.

Radiance Fields (RF) are popular to represent casually-captured scenes for new view synthesis and several applications beyond it. Mixed reality on personal spaces needs understanding and manipulating scenes represented as RFs, with semantic segmentation of objects as an important step. Prior segmentation efforts show promise but don't scale to complex objects with diverse appearance. We present the ISRF method to interactively segment objects with fine structure and appearance. Nearest neighbor feature matching using distilled semantic features identifies high-confidence seed regions. Bilateral search in a joint spatio-semantic space grows the region to recover accurate segmentation. We show state-of-the-art results of segmenting objects from RFs and compositing them to another scene, changing appearance, etc., and an interactive segmentation tool that others can use. Project Page: https://rahul-goel.github.io/isrf/

CVJun 7, 2023
FusedRF: Fusing Multiple Radiance Fields

Rahul Goel, Dhawal Sirikonda, Rajvi Shah et al.

Radiance Fields (RFs) have shown great potential to represent scenes from casually captured discrete views. Compositing parts or whole of multiple captured scenes could greatly interest several XR applications. Prior works can generate new views of such scenes by tracing each scene in parallel. This increases the render times and memory requirements with the number of components. In this work, we provide a method to create a single, compact, fused RF representation for a scene composited using multiple RFs. The fused RF has the same render times and memory utilizations as a single RF. Our method distills information from multiple teacher RFs into a single student RF while also facilitating further manipulations like addition and deletion into the fused representation.

CVDec 13, 2016
Learning to Hash-tag Videos with Tag2Vec

Aditya Singh, Saurabh Saini, Rajvi Shah et al.

User-given tags or labels are valuable resources for semantic understanding of visual media such as images and videos. Recently, a new type of labeling mechanism known as hash-tags have become increasingly popular on social media sites. In this paper, we study the problem of generating relevant and useful hash-tags for short video clips. Traditional data-driven approaches for tag enrichment and recommendation use direct visual similarity for label transfer and propagation. We attempt to learn a direct low-cost mapping from video to hash-tags using a two step training process. We first employ a natural language processing (NLP) technique, skip-gram models with neural network training to learn a low-dimensional vector representation of hash-tags (Tag2Vec) using a corpus of 10 million hash-tags. We then train an embedding function to map video features to the low-dimensional Tag2vec space. We learn this embedding for 29 categories of short video clips with hash-tags. A query video without any tag-information can then be directly mapped to the vector space of tags using the learned embedding and relevant tags can be found by performing a simple nearest-neighbor retrieval in the Tag2Vec space. We validate the relevance of the tags suggested by our system qualitatively and quantitatively with a user study.