Deep Camera Pose Regression Using Pseudo-LiDAR
This work addresses camera localization for applications like autonomous vehicles and augmented reality, offering an incremental improvement by introducing a better representation for depth data.
The paper tackles the problem of 6DOF camera pose regression by proposing FusionLoc, a dual-stream neural network that uses pseudo-LiDAR representations instead of depth maps, resulting in an average improvement of 0.33m and 4.35° over RGB-D PoseNet on the 7 Scenes dataset.
An accurate and robust large-scale localization system is an integral component for active areas of research such as autonomous vehicles and augmented reality. To this end, many learning algorithms have been proposed that predict 6DOF camera pose from RGB or RGB-D images. However, previous methods that incorporate depth typically treat the data the same way as RGB images, often adding depth maps as additional channels to RGB images and passing them through convolutional neural networks (CNNs). In this paper, we show that converting depth maps into pseudo-LiDAR signals, previously shown to be useful for 3D object detection, is a better representation for camera localization tasks by projecting point clouds that can accurately determine 6DOF camera pose. This is demonstrated by first comparing localization accuracies of a network operating exclusively on pseudo-LiDAR representations, with networks operating exclusively on depth maps. We then propose FusionLoc, a novel architecture that uses pseudo-LiDAR to regress a 6DOF camera pose. FusionLoc is a dual stream neural network, which aims to remedy common issues with typical 2D CNNs operating on RGB-D images. The results from this architecture are compared against various other state-of-the-art deep pose regression implementations using the 7 Scenes dataset. The findings are that FusionLoc performs better than a number of other camera localization methods, with a notable improvement being, on average, 0.33m and 4.35° more accurate than RGB-D PoseNet. By proving the validity of using pseudo-LiDAR signals over depth maps for localization, there are new considerations when implementing large-scale localization systems.