CVMar 29, 2022Code
Light Field Depth Estimation via Stitched Epipolar Plane ImagesPing Zhou, Langqing Shi, Xiaoyang Liu et al.
Depth estimation is a fundamental problem in light field processing. Epipolar-plane image (EPI)-based methods often encounter challenges such as low accuracy in slope computation due to discretization errors and limited angular resolution. Besides, existing methods perform well in most regions but struggle to produce sharp edges in occluded regions and resolve ambiguities in texture-less regions. To address these issues, we propose the concept of stitched-EPI (SEPI) to enhance slope computation. SEPI achieves this by shifting and concatenating lines from different EPIs that correspond to the same 3D point. Moreover, we introduce the half-SEPI algorithm, which focuses exclusively on the non-occluded portion of lines to handle occlusion. Additionally, we present a depth propagation strategy aimed at improving depth estimation in texture-less regions. This strategy involves determining the depth of such regions by progressing from the edges towards the interior, prioritizing accurate regions over coarse regions. Through extensive experimental evaluations and ablation studies, we validate the effectiveness of our proposed method. The results demonstrate its superior ability to generate more accurate and robust depth maps across all regions compared to state-of-the-art methods. The source code will be publicly available at https://github.com/PingZhou-LF/Light-Field-Depth-Estimation-Based-on-Stitched-EPIs.
CVNov 14, 2023
Learning based Deep Disentangling Light Field Reconstruction and Disparity Estimation ApplicationLangqing Shi, Ping Zhou
Light field cameras have a wide range of uses due to their ability to simultaneously record light intensity and direction. The angular resolution of light fields is important for downstream tasks such as depth estimation, yet is often difficult to improve due to hardware limitations. Conventional methods tend to perform poorly against the challenge of large disparity in sparse light fields, while general CNNs have difficulty extracting spatial and angular features coupled together in 4D light fields. The light field disentangling mechanism transforms the 4D light field into 2D image format, which is more favorable for CNN for feature extraction. In this paper, we propose a Deep Disentangling Mechanism, which inherits the principle of the light field disentangling mechanism and further develops the design of the feature extractor and adds advanced network structure. We design a light-field reconstruction network (i.e., DDASR) on the basis of the Deep Disentangling Mechanism, and achieve SOTA performance in the experiments. In addition, we design a Block Traversal Angular Super-Resolution Strategy for the practical application of depth estimation enhancement where the input views is often higher than 2x2 in the experiments resulting in a high memory usage, which can reduce the memory usage while having a better reconstruction performance.
IVFeb 29, 2024
Unsupervised Learning of High-resolution Light Field Imaging via Beam Splitter-based Hybrid LensesJianxin Lei, Chengcai Xu, Langqing Shi et al.
In this paper, we design a beam splitter-based hybrid light field imaging prototype to record 4D light field image and high-resolution 2D image simultaneously, and make a hybrid light field dataset. The 2D image could be considered as the high-resolution ground truth corresponding to the low-resolution central sub-aperture image of 4D light field image. Subsequently, we propose an unsupervised learning-based super-resolution framework with the hybrid light field dataset, which adaptively settles the light field spatial super-resolution problem with a complex degradation model. Specifically, we design two loss functions based on pre-trained models that enable the super-resolution network to learn the detailed features and light field parallax structure with only one ground truth. Extensive experiments demonstrate the same superiority of our approach with supervised learning-based state-of-the-art ones. To our knowledge, it is the first end-to-end unsupervised learning-based spatial super-resolution approach in light field imaging research, whose input is available from our beam splitter-based hybrid light field system. The hardware and software together may help promote the application of light field super-resolution to a great extent.