CVNov 11, 2022
RaLiBEV: Radar and LiDAR BEV Fusion Learning for Anchor Box Free Object Detection SystemsYanlong Yang, Jianan Liu, Tao Huang et al.
In autonomous driving, LiDAR and radar are crucial for environmental perception. LiDAR offers precise 3D spatial sensing information but struggles in adverse weather like fog. Conversely, radar signals can penetrate rain or mist due to their specific wavelength but are prone to noise disturbances. Recent state-of-the-art works reveal that the fusion of radar and LiDAR can lead to robust detection in adverse weather. The existing works adopt convolutional neural network architecture to extract features from each sensor data, then align and aggregate the two branch features to predict object detection results. However, these methods have low accuracy of predicted bounding boxes due to a simple design of label assignment and fusion strategies. In this paper, we propose a bird's-eye view fusion learning-based anchor box-free object detection system, which fuses the feature derived from the radar range-azimuth heatmap and the LiDAR point cloud to estimate possible objects. Different label assignment strategies have been designed to facilitate the consistency between the classification of foreground or background anchor points and the corresponding bounding box regressions. Furthermore, the performance of the proposed object detector is further enhanced by employing a novel interactive transformer module. The superior performance of the methods proposed in this paper has been demonstrated using the recently published Oxford Radar RobotCar dataset. Our system's average precision significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art method by 13.1% and 19.0% at Intersection of Union (IoU) of 0.8 under 'Clear+Foggy' training conditions for 'Clear' and 'Foggy' testing, respectively.
CVOct 31, 2025
Self-Diffusion Driven Blind ImagingYanlong Yang, Guanxiong Luo
Optical imaging systems are inherently imperfect due to diffraction limits, lens manufacturing tolerances, assembly misalignment, and other physical constraints. In addition, unavoidable camera shake and object motion further introduce non-ideal degradations during acquisition. These aberrations and motion-induced variations are typically unknown, difficult to measure, and costly to model or calibrate in practice. Blind inverse problems offer a promising direction by jointly estimating both the latent image and the unknown degradation kernel. However, existing approaches often suffer from convergence instability, limited prior expressiveness, and sensitivity to hyperparameters. Inspired by recent advances in self-diffusion, we propose DeblurSDI, a zero-shot, self-supervised blind imaging framework that requires no pre-training. DeblurSDI formulates blind image recovery as an iterative reverse self-diffusion process that begins from pure noise and progressively refines both the sharp image and the blur kernel. Extensive experiments on combined optical aberrations and motion blur demonstrate that DeblurSDI consistently outperforms other methods by a substantial margin.
LGOct 24, 2025
Self-diffusion for Solving Inverse ProblemsGuanxiong Luo, Shoujin Huang, Yanlong Yang
We propose self-diffusion, a novel framework for solving inverse problems without relying on pretrained generative models. Traditional diffusion-based approaches require training a model on a clean dataset to learn to reverse the forward noising process. This model is then used to sample clean solutions -- corresponding to posterior sampling from a Bayesian perspective -- that are consistent with the observed data under a specific task. In contrast, self-diffusion introduces a self-contained iterative process that alternates between noising and denoising steps to progressively refine its estimate of the solution. At each step of self-diffusion, noise is added to the current estimate, and a self-denoiser, which is a single untrained convolutional network randomly initialized from scratch, is continuously trained for certain iterations via a data fidelity loss to predict the solution from the noisy estimate. Essentially, self-diffusion exploits the spectral bias of neural networks and modulates it through a scheduled noise process. Without relying on pretrained score functions or external denoisers, this approach still remains adaptive to arbitrary forward operators and noisy observations, making it highly flexible and broadly applicable. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach on a variety of linear inverse problems, showing that self-diffusion achieves competitive or superior performance compared to other methods.