Junjie Cheng

2papers

2 Papers

20.2CVJun 2
UnsOcc: 3D Semantic Occupancy Prediction in Unstructured Scene via Rendering Fusion

Ye Wu, Ruiqi Song, Baiyong Ding et al.

Unstructured scenes present unique challenges for autonomous driving, as irregular obstacles and sparse scene layouts undermine the effectiveness of traditional perception methods such as 3D object detection. 3D semantic occupancy prediction has emerged as a prominent focus due to its ability to provide dense spatial representations by assigning semantic labels to individual voxels in 3D space. However, directly applying 3D semantic occupancy prediction to unstructured scenes remains challenging because scene sparsity hinders effective cross-modal fusion and the more severe long-tail distribution in these scenarios further degrades prediction performance. To validate the effectiveness of our approach, we construct a dedicated dataset of unstructured scenes collected from open-pit mines. Based on this, we propose UnsOcc, a multi-modal 3D semantic occupancy prediction framework that improves robustness in unstructured environments. At its core, we introduce a rendering-based fusion module, RenderFusion, which enhances cross-modal feature alignment through bidirectional rendering supervision. Furthermore, we propose GSRefinement, a detail-aware auxiliary supervision method based on Gaussian Splatting that projects sparse 3D occupancy predictions into dense 2D semantic segmentation maps, enabling effective supervision for long-tail categories. Extensive experiments on both the open-pit mine dataset and the nuScenes dataset demonstrate that our method significantly outperforms existing state-of-the-art approaches.

SEJun 27, 2018
Performance and Programming Effort Trade-offs of Android Persistence Frameworks

Zheng "Jason'' Song, Jing Pu, Junjie Cheng et al.

A fundamental building block of a mobile application is the ability to persist program data between different invocations. Referred to as \emph{persistence}, this functionality is commonly implemented by means of persistence frameworks. Without a clear understanding of the energy consumption, execution time, and programming effort of popular Android persistence frameworks, mobile developers lack guidelines for selecting frameworks for their applications. To bridge this knowledge gap, we report on the results of a systematic study of the performance and programming effort trade-offs of eight Android persistence frameworks, and provide practical recommendations for mobile application developers.