Michael Happold

CV
5papers
372citations
Novelty55%
AI Score28

5 Papers

CVJun 29, 2023
MotionTrack: End-to-End Transformer-based Multi-Object Tracing with LiDAR-Camera Fusion

Ce Zhang, Chengjie Zhang, Yiluan Guo et al. · eth-zurich

Multiple Object Tracking (MOT) is crucial to autonomous vehicle perception. End-to-end transformer-based algorithms, which detect and track objects simultaneously, show great potential for the MOT task. However, most existing methods focus on image-based tracking with a single object category. In this paper, we propose an end-to-end transformer-based MOT algorithm (MotionTrack) with multi-modality sensor inputs to track objects with multiple classes. Our objective is to establish a transformer baseline for the MOT in an autonomous driving environment. The proposed algorithm consists of a transformer-based data association (DA) module and a transformer-based query enhancement module to achieve MOT and Multiple Object Detection (MOD) simultaneously. The MotionTrack and its variations achieve better results (AMOTA score at 0.55) on the nuScenes dataset compared with other classical baseline models, such as the AB3DMOT, the CenterTrack, and the probabilistic 3D Kalman filter. In addition, we prove that a modified attention mechanism can be utilized for DA to accomplish the MOT, and aggregate history features to enhance the MOD performance.

SPMar 21, 2023
ADCNet: Learning from Raw Radar Data via Distillation

Bo Yang, Ishan Khatri, Michael Happold et al.

As autonomous vehicles and advanced driving assistance systems have entered wider deployment, there is an increased interest in building robust perception systems using radars. Radar-based systems are lower cost and more robust to adverse weather conditions than their LiDAR-based counterparts; however the point clouds produced are typically noisy and sparse by comparison. In order to combat these challenges, recent research has focused on consuming the raw radar data, instead of the final radar point cloud. We build on this line of work and demonstrate that by bringing elements of the signal processing pipeline into our network and then pre-training on the signal processing task, we are able to achieve state of the art detection performance on the RADIal dataset. Our method uses expensive offline signal processing algorithms to pseudo-label data and trains a network to distill this information into a fast convolutional backbone, which can then be finetuned for perception tasks. Extensive experiment results corroborate the effectiveness of the proposed techniques.

CVSep 8, 2020
Joint Pose and Shape Estimation of Vehicles from LiDAR Data

Hunter Goforth, Xiaoyan Hu, Michael Happold et al.

We address the problem of estimating the pose and shape of vehicles from LiDAR scans, a common problem faced by the autonomous vehicle community. Recent work has tended to address pose and shape estimation separately in isolation, despite the inherent connection between the two. We investigate a method of jointly estimating shape and pose where a single encoding is learned from which shape and pose may be decoded in an efficient yet effective manner. We additionally introduce a novel joint pose and shape loss, and show that this joint training method produces better results than independently-trained pose and shape estimators. We evaluate our method on both synthetic data and real-world data, and show superior performance against a state-of-the-art baseline.

CVJun 14, 2020
Geometry-Aware Instance Segmentation with Disparity Maps

Cho-Ying Wu, Xiaoyan Hu, Michael Happold et al.

Most previous works of outdoor instance segmentation for images only use color information. We explore a novel direction of sensor fusion to exploit stereo cameras. Geometric information from disparities helps separate overlapping objects of the same or different classes. Moreover, geometric information penalizes region proposals with unlikely 3D shapes thus suppressing false positive detections. Mask regression is based on 2D, 2.5D, and 3D ROI using the pseudo-lidar and image-based representations. These mask predictions are fused by a mask scoring process. However, public datasets only adopt stereo systems with shorter baseline and focal legnth, which limit measuring ranges of stereo cameras. We collect and utilize High-Quality Driving Stereo (HQDS) dataset, using much longer baseline and focal length with higher resolution. Our performance attains state of the art. Please refer to our project page. The full paper is available here.

CVDec 13, 2019
Hierarchical Deep Stereo Matching on High-resolution Images

Gengshan Yang, Joshua Manela, Michael Happold et al.

We explore the problem of real-time stereo matching on high-res imagery. Many state-of-the-art (SOTA) methods struggle to process high-res imagery because of memory constraints or speed limitations. To address this issue, we propose an end-to-end framework that searches for correspondences incrementally over a coarse-to-fine hierarchy. Because high-res stereo datasets are relatively rare, we introduce a dataset with high-res stereo pairs for both training and evaluation. Our approach achieved SOTA performance on Middlebury-v3 and KITTI-15 while running significantly faster than its competitors. The hierarchical design also naturally allows for anytime on-demand reports of disparity by capping intermediate coarse results, allowing us to accurately predict disparity for near-range structures with low latency (30ms). We demonstrate that the performance-vs-speed trade-off afforded by on-demand hierarchies may address sensing needs for time-critical applications such as autonomous driving.