17.0CVMar 28
Zero-shot Vision-Language Reranking for Cross-View GeolocalizationYunus Talha Erzurumlu, John E. Anderson, William J. Shuart et al.
Cross-view geolocalization (CVGL) systems, while effective at retrieving a list of relevant candidates (high Recall@k), often fail to identify the single best match (low Top-1 accuracy). This work investigates the use of zero-shot Vision-Language Models (VLMs) as rerankers to address this gap. We propose a two-stage framework: state-of-the-art (SOTA) retrieval followed by VLM reranking. We systematically compare two strategies: (1) Pointwise (scoring candidates individually) and (2) Pairwise (comparing candidates relatively). Experiments on the VIGOR dataset show a clear divergence: all pointwise methods cause a catastrophic drop in performance or no change at all. In contrast, a pairwise comparison strategy using LLaVA improves Top-1 accuracy over the strong retrieval baseline. Our analysis concludes that, these VLMs are poorly calibrated for absolute relevance scoring but are effective at fine-grained relative visual judgment, making pairwise reranking a promising direction for enhancing CVGL precision.
CVFeb 26
BetterScene: 3D Scene Synthesis with Representation-Aligned Generative ModelYuci Han, Charles Toth, John E. Anderson et al.
We present BetterScene, an approach to enhance novel view synthesis (NVS) quality for diverse real-world scenes using extremely sparse, unconstrained photos. BetterScene leverages the production-ready Stable Video Diffusion (SVD) model pretrained on billions of frames as a strong backbone, aiming to mitigate artifacts and recover view-consistent details at inference time. Conventional methods have developed similar diffusion-based solutions to address these challenges of novel view synthesis. Despite significant improvements, these methods typically rely on off-the-shelf pretrained diffusion priors and fine-tune only the UNet module while keeping other components frozen, which still leads to inconsistent details and artifacts even when incorporating geometry-aware regularizations like depth or semantic conditions. To address this, we investigate the latent space of the diffusion model and introduce two components: (1) temporal equivariance regularization and (2) vision foundation model-aligned representation, both applied to the variational autoencoder (VAE) module within the SVD pipeline. BetterScene integrates a feed-forward 3D Gaussian Splatting (3DGS) model to render features as inputs for the SVD enhancer and generate continuous, artifact-free, consistent novel views. We evaluate on the challenging DL3DV-10K dataset and demonstrate superior performance compared to state-of-the-art methods.
CVApr 19, 2025
Lightweight Road Environment Segmentation using Vector QuantizationJiyong Kwag, Alper Yilmaz, Charles Toth
Road environment segmentation plays a significant role in autonomous driving. Numerous works based on Fully Convolutional Networks (FCNs) and Transformer architectures have been proposed to leverage local and global contextual learning for efficient and accurate semantic segmentation. In both architectures, the encoder often relies heavily on extracting continuous representations from the image, which limits the ability to represent meaningful discrete information. To address this limitation, we propose segmentation of the autonomous driving environment using vector quantization. Vector quantization offers three primary advantages for road environment segmentation. (1) Each continuous feature from the encoder is mapped to a discrete vector from the codebook, helping the model discover distinct features more easily than with complex continuous features. (2) Since a discrete feature acts as compressed versions of the encoder's continuous features, they also compress noise or outliers, enhancing the image segmentation task. (3) Vector quantization encourages the latent space to form coarse clusters of continuous features, forcing the model to group similar features, making the learned representations more structured for the decoding process. In this work, we combined vector quantization with the lightweight image segmentation model MobileUNETR and used it as a baseline model for comparison to demonstrate its efficiency. Through experiments, we achieved 77.0 % mIoU on Cityscapes, outperforming the baseline by 2.9 % without increasing the model's initial size or complexity.
ROMar 20, 2025
UAS Visual Navigation in Large and Unseen Environments via a Meta AgentYuci Han, Charles Toth, Alper Yilmaz
The aim of this work is to develop an approach that enables Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) to efficiently learn to navigate in large-scale urban environments and transfer their acquired expertise to novel environments. To achieve this, we propose a meta-curriculum training scheme. First, meta-training allows the agent to learn a master policy to generalize across tasks. The resulting model is then fine-tuned on the downstream tasks. We organize the training curriculum in a hierarchical manner such that the agent is guided from coarse to fine towards the target task. In addition, we introduce Incremental Self-Adaptive Reinforcement learning (ISAR), an algorithm that combines the ideas of incremental learning and meta-reinforcement learning (MRL). In contrast to traditional reinforcement learning (RL), which focuses on acquiring a policy for a specific task, MRL aims to learn a policy with fast transfer ability to novel tasks. However, the MRL training process is time consuming, whereas our proposed ISAR algorithm achieves faster convergence than the conventional MRL algorithm. We evaluate the proposed methodologies in simulated environments and demonstrate that using this training philosophy in conjunction with the ISAR algorithm significantly improves the convergence speed for navigation in large-scale cities and the adaptation proficiency in novel environments.
ROJan 13, 2022
Observability Analysis and Keyframe-Based Filtering for Visual Inertial Odometry with Full Self-CalibrationJianzhu Huai, Yukai Lin, Yuan Zhuang et al.
Camera-IMU (Inertial Measurement Unit) sensor fusion has been extensively studied in recent decades. Numerous observability analysis and fusion schemes for motion estimation with self-calibration have been presented. However, it has been uncertain whether both camera and IMU intrinsic parameters are observable under general motion. To answer this question, by using the Lie derivatives, we first prove that for a rolling shutter (RS) camera-IMU system, all intrinsic and extrinsic parameters, camera time offset, and readout time of the RS camera, are observable with an unknown landmark. To our knowledge, we are the first to present such a proof. Next, to validate this analysis and to solve the drift issue of a structureless filter during standstills, we develop a Keyframe-based Sliding Window Filter (KSWF) for odometry and self-calibration, which works with a monocular RS camera or stereo RS cameras. Though the keyframe concept is widely used in vision-based sensor fusion, to our knowledge, KSWF is the first of its kind to support self-calibration. Our simulation and real data tests have validated that it is possible to fully calibrate the camera-IMU system using observations of opportunistic landmarks under diverse motion. Real data tests confirmed previous allusions that keeping landmarks in the state vector can remedy the drift in standstill, and showed that the keyframe-based scheme is an alternative solution.
RODec 30, 2020
A Versatile Keyframe-Based Structureless Filter for Visual Inertial OdometryJianzhu Huai, Yukai Lin, Charles Toth et al.
Motion estimation by fusing data from at least a camera and an Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) enables many applications in robotics. However, among the multitude of Visual Inertial Odometry (VIO) methods, few efficiently estimate device motion with consistent covariance, and calibrate sensor parameters online for handling data from consumer sensors. This paper addresses the gap with a Keyframe-based Structureless Filter (KSF). For efficiency, landmarks are not included in the filter's state vector. For robustness, KSF associates feature observations and manages state variables using the concept of keyframes. For flexibility, KSF supports anytime calibration of IMU systematic errors, as well as extrinsic, intrinsic, and temporal parameters of each camera. Estimator consistency and observability of sensor parameters were analyzed by simulation. Sensitivity to design options, e.g., feature matching method and camera count was studied with the EuRoC benchmark. Sensor parameter estimation was evaluated on raw TUM VI sequences and smartphone data. Moreover, pose estimation accuracy was evaluated on EuRoC and TUM VI sequences versus recent VIO methods. These tests confirm that KSF reliably calibrates sensor parameters when the data contain adequate motion, and consistently estimate motion with accuracy rivaling recent VIO methods. Our implementation runs at 42 Hz with stereo camera images on a consumer laptop.