IVCVSep 16, 2021

Towards Non-Line-of-Sight Photography

arXiv:2109.07783v25 citations
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses a challenging deficiency in NLOS imaging for applications requiring high-quality visual reconstructions, representing a novel formulation rather than an incremental improvement.

The paper tackles the problem of accurately recovering object textures and appearance in non-line-of-sight imaging, proposing a data-driven method that directly reconstructs 2D images with unprecedented lateral resolution and image quality.

Non-line-of-sight (NLOS) imaging is based on capturing the multi-bounce indirect reflections from the hidden objects. Active NLOS imaging systems rely on the capture of the time of flight of light through the scene, and have shown great promise for the accurate and robust reconstruction of hidden scenes without the need for specialized scene setups and prior assumptions. Despite that existing methods can reconstruct 3D geometries of the hidden scene with excellent depth resolution, accurately recovering object textures and appearance with high lateral resolution remains an challenging problem. In this work, we propose a new problem formulation, called NLOS photography, to specifically address this deficiency. Rather than performing an intermediate estimate of the 3D scene geometry, our method follows a data-driven approach and directly reconstructs 2D images of a NLOS scene that closely resemble the pictures taken with a conventional camera from the location of the relay wall. This formulation largely simplifies the challenging reconstruction problem by bypassing the explicit modeling of 3D geometry, and enables the learning of a deep model with a relatively small training dataset. The results are NLOS reconstructions of unprecedented lateral resolution and image quality.

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