CVMar 30, 2021
Endo-Depth-and-Motion: Reconstruction and Tracking in Endoscopic Videos using Depth Networks and Photometric ConstraintsDavid Recasens, José Lamarca, José M. Fácil et al.
Estimating a scene reconstruction and the camera motion from in-body videos is challenging due to several factors, e.g. the deformation of in-body cavities or the lack of texture. In this paper we present Endo-Depth-and-Motion, a pipeline that estimates the 6-degrees-of-freedom camera pose and dense 3D scene models from monocular endoscopic videos. Our approach leverages recent advances in self-supervised depth networks to generate pseudo-RGBD frames, then tracks the camera pose using photometric residuals and fuses the registered depth maps in a volumetric representation. We present an extensive experimental evaluation in the public dataset Hamlyn, showing high-quality results and comparisons against relevant baselines. We also release all models and code for future comparisons.
CVOct 19, 2020
SD-DefSLAM: Semi-Direct Monocular SLAM for Deformable and Intracorporeal ScenesJuan J. Gómez Rodríguez, José Lamarca, Javier Morlana et al.
Conventional SLAM techniques strongly rely on scene rigidity to solve data association, ignoring dynamic parts of the scene. In this work we present Semi-Direct DefSLAM (SD-DefSLAM), a novel monocular deformable SLAM method able to map highly deforming environments, built on top of DefSLAM. To robustly solve data association in challenging deforming scenes, SD-DefSLAM combines direct and indirect methods: an enhanced illumination-invariant Lucas-Kanade tracker for data association, geometric Bundle Adjustment for pose and deformable map estimation, and bag-of-words based on feature descriptors for camera relocation. Dynamic objects are detected and segmented-out using a CNN trained for the specific application domain. We thoroughly evaluate our system in two public datasets. The mandala dataset is a SLAM benchmark with increasingly aggressive deformations. The Hamlyn dataset contains intracorporeal sequences that pose serious real-life challenges beyond deformation like weak texture, specular reflections, surgical tools and occlusions. Our results show that SD-DefSLAM outperforms DefSLAM in point tracking, reconstruction accuracy and scale drift thanks to the improvement in all the data association steps, being the first system able to robustly perform SLAM inside the human body.