CVJul 24, 2023
CarPatch: A Synthetic Benchmark for Radiance Field Evaluation on Vehicle ComponentsDavide Di Nucci, Alessandro Simoni, Matteo Tomei et al.
Neural Radiance Fields (NeRFs) have gained widespread recognition as a highly effective technique for representing 3D reconstructions of objects and scenes derived from sets of images. Despite their efficiency, NeRF models can pose challenges in certain scenarios such as vehicle inspection, where the lack of sufficient data or the presence of challenging elements (e.g. reflections) strongly impact the accuracy of the reconstruction. To this aim, we introduce CarPatch, a novel synthetic benchmark of vehicles. In addition to a set of images annotated with their intrinsic and extrinsic camera parameters, the corresponding depth maps and semantic segmentation masks have been generated for each view. Global and part-based metrics have been defined and used to evaluate, compare, and better characterize some state-of-the-art techniques. The dataset is publicly released at https://aimagelab.ing.unimore.it/go/carpatch and can be used as an evaluation guide and as a baseline for future work on this challenging topic.
CVSep 9, 2024
KRONC: Keypoint-based Robust Camera Optimization for 3D Car ReconstructionDavide Di Nucci, Alessandro Simoni, Matteo Tomei et al.
The three-dimensional representation of objects or scenes starting from a set of images has been a widely discussed topic for years and has gained additional attention after the diffusion of NeRF-based approaches. However, an underestimated prerequisite is the knowledge of camera poses or, more specifically, the estimation of the extrinsic calibration parameters. Although excellent general-purpose Structure-from-Motion methods are available as a pre-processing step, their computational load is high and they require a lot of frames to guarantee sufficient overlapping among the views. This paper introduces KRONC, a novel approach aimed at inferring view poses by leveraging prior knowledge about the object to reconstruct and its representation through semantic keypoints. With a focus on vehicle scenes, KRONC is able to estimate the position of the views as a solution to a light optimization problem targeting the convergence of keypoints' back-projections to a singular point. To validate the method, a specific dataset of real-world car scenes has been collected. Experiments confirm KRONC's ability to generate excellent estimates of camera poses starting from very coarse initialization. Results are comparable with Structure-from-Motion methods with huge savings in computation. Code and data will be made publicly available.
CVDec 9, 2019Code
Video action detection by learning graph-based spatio-temporal interactionsMatteo Tomei, Lorenzo Baraldi, Simone Calderara et al.
Action Detection is a complex task that aims to detect and classify human actions in video clips. Typically, it has been addressed by processing fine-grained features extracted from a video classification backbone. Recently, thanks to the robustness of object and people detectors, a deeper focus has been added on relationship modelling. Following this line, we propose a graph-based framework to learn high-level interactions between people and objects, in both space and time. In our formulation, spatio-temporal relationships are learned through self-attention on a multi-layer graph structure which can connect entities from consecutive clips, thus considering long-range spatial and temporal dependencies. The proposed module is backbone independent by design and does not require end-to-end training. Extensive experiments are conducted on the AVA dataset, where our model demonstrates state-of-the-art results and consistent improvements over baselines built with different backbones. Code is publicly available at https://github.com/aimagelab/STAGE_action_detection.
CVNov 26, 2018Code
Art2Real: Unfolding the Reality of Artworks via Semantically-Aware Image-to-Image TranslationMatteo Tomei, Marcella Cornia, Lorenzo Baraldi et al.
The applicability of computer vision to real paintings and artworks has been rarely investigated, even though a vast heritage would greatly benefit from techniques which can understand and process data from the artistic domain. This is partially due to the small amount of annotated artistic data, which is not even comparable to that of natural images captured by cameras. In this paper, we propose a semantic-aware architecture which can translate artworks to photo-realistic visualizations, thus reducing the gap between visual features of artistic and realistic data. Our architecture can generate natural images by retrieving and learning details from real photos through a similarity matching strategy which leverages a weakly-supervised semantic understanding of the scene. Experimental results show that the proposed technique leads to increased realism and to a reduction in domain shift, which improves the performance of pre-trained architectures for classification, detection, and segmentation. Code is publicly available at: https://github.com/aimagelab/art2real.
CVJul 16, 2025
BRUM: Robust 3D Vehicle Reconstruction from 360 Sparse ImagesDavide Di Nucci, Matteo Tomei, Guido Borghi et al.
Accurate 3D reconstruction of vehicles is vital for applications such as vehicle inspection, predictive maintenance, and urban planning. Existing methods like Neural Radiance Fields and Gaussian Splatting have shown impressive results but remain limited by their reliance on dense input views, which hinders real-world applicability. This paper addresses the challenge of reconstructing vehicles from sparse-view inputs, leveraging depth maps and a robust pose estimation architecture to synthesize novel views and augment training data. Specifically, we enhance Gaussian Splatting by integrating a selective photometric loss, applied only to high-confidence pixels, and replacing standard Structure-from-Motion pipelines with the DUSt3R architecture to improve camera pose estimation. Furthermore, we present a novel dataset featuring both synthetic and real-world public transportation vehicles, enabling extensive evaluation of our approach. Experimental results demonstrate state-of-the-art performance across multiple benchmarks, showcasing the method's ability to achieve high-quality reconstructions even under constrained input conditions.
CVFeb 15, 2021
RMS-Net: Regression and Masking for Soccer Event SpottingMatteo Tomei, Lorenzo Baraldi, Simone Calderara et al.
The recently proposed action spotting task consists in finding the exact timestamp in which an event occurs. This task fits particularly well for soccer videos, where events correspond to salient actions strictly defined by soccer rules (a goal occurs when the ball crosses the goal line). In this paper, we devise a lightweight and modular network for action spotting, which can simultaneously predict the event label and its temporal offset using the same underlying features. We enrich our model with two training strategies: the first one for data balancing and uniform sampling, the second for masking ambiguous frames and keeping the most discriminative visual cues. When tested on the SoccerNet dataset and using standard features, our full proposal exceeds the current state of the art by 3 Average-mAP points. Additionally, it reaches a gain of more than 10 Average-mAP points on the test set when fine-tuned in combination with a strong 2D backbone.