CVGRJun 2, 2023

PanoGRF: Generalizable Spherical Radiance Fields for Wide-baseline Panoramas

arXiv:2306.01531v223 citationsh-index: 21
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of immersive 6DoF virtual reality experiences by enabling better novel view synthesis from sparse panoramic inputs, which is incremental but important for VR applications.

The paper tackles the problem of synthesizing novel views from wide-baseline panoramas, which is challenging due to overfitting in existing methods, and proposes PanoGRF, a generalizable spherical radiance field that incorporates 360° scene priors and monocular depth to improve geometry, achieving significant performance gains over state-of-the-art methods on multiple datasets.

Achieving an immersive experience enabling users to explore virtual environments with six degrees of freedom (6DoF) is essential for various applications such as virtual reality (VR). Wide-baseline panoramas are commonly used in these applications to reduce network bandwidth and storage requirements. However, synthesizing novel views from these panoramas remains a key challenge. Although existing neural radiance field methods can produce photorealistic views under narrow-baseline and dense image captures, they tend to overfit the training views when dealing with \emph{wide-baseline} panoramas due to the difficulty in learning accurate geometry from sparse $360^{\circ}$ views. To address this problem, we propose PanoGRF, Generalizable Spherical Radiance Fields for Wide-baseline Panoramas, which construct spherical radiance fields incorporating $360^{\circ}$ scene priors. Unlike generalizable radiance fields trained on perspective images, PanoGRF avoids the information loss from panorama-to-perspective conversion and directly aggregates geometry and appearance features of 3D sample points from each panoramic view based on spherical projection. Moreover, as some regions of the panorama are only visible from one view while invisible from others under wide baseline settings, PanoGRF incorporates $360^{\circ}$ monocular depth priors into spherical depth estimation to improve the geometry features. Experimental results on multiple panoramic datasets demonstrate that PanoGRF significantly outperforms state-of-the-art generalizable view synthesis methods for wide-baseline panoramas (e.g., OmniSyn) and perspective images (e.g., IBRNet, NeuRay).

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