Motion Segmentation by Exploiting Complementary Geometric Models
This work addresses motion segmentation for computer vision applications, offering an incremental improvement by integrating complementary geometric models.
The paper tackles motion segmentation by combining fundamental matrix and homography models to overcome limitations in handling general or degenerate scenes, achieving state-of-the-art performance on existing datasets and introducing a more challenging real-world dataset.
Many real-world sequences cannot be conveniently categorized as general or degenerate; in such cases, imposing a false dichotomy in using the fundamental matrix or homography model for motion segmentation would lead to difficulty. Even when we are confronted with a general scene-motion, the fundamental matrix approach as a model for motion segmentation still suffers from several defects, which we discuss in this paper. The full potential of the fundamental matrix approach could only be realized if we judiciously harness information from the simpler homography model. From these considerations, we propose a multi-view spectral clustering framework that synergistically combines multiple models together. We show that the performance can be substantially improved in this way. We perform extensive testing on existing motion segmentation datasets, achieving state-of-the-art performance on all of them; we also put forth a more realistic and challenging dataset adapted from the KITTI benchmark, containing real-world effects such as strong perspectives and strong forward translations not seen in the traditional datasets.