CVSep 6, 2021

Single-Camera 3D Head Fitting for Mixed Reality Clinical Applications

arXiv:2109.02740v25 citations
AI Analysis

This enables mixed reality clinical applications by providing accurate head models, though it is incremental as it builds on existing 3D morphable models and reconstruction techniques.

The paper tackles the problem of estimating a person's complete 3D head shape from a single moving camera video, achieving consistent geometry across diverse head shapes, environments, and devices.

We address the problem of estimating the shape of a person's head, defined as the geometry of the complete head surface, from a video taken with a single moving camera, and determining the alignment of the fitted 3D head for all video frames, irrespective of the person's pose. 3D head reconstructions commonly tend to focus on perfecting the face reconstruction, leaving the scalp to a statistical approximation. Our goal is to reconstruct the head model of each person to enable future mixed reality applications. To do this, we recover a dense 3D reconstruction and camera information via structure-from-motion and multi-view stereo. These are then used in a new two-stage fitting process to recover the 3D head shape by iteratively fitting a 3D morphable model of the head with the dense reconstruction in canonical space and fitting it to each person's head, using both traditional facial landmarks and scalp features extracted from the head's segmentation mask. Our approach recovers consistent geometry for varying head shapes, from videos taken by different people, with different smartphones, and in a variety of environments from living rooms to outdoor spaces.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes