Hierarchically Structured Neural Bones for Reconstructing Animatable Objects from Casual Videos
This enables users to generate and intuitively manipulate animatable 3D models from casual videos, addressing a domain-specific need in 3D reconstruction and animation.
The paper tackles the problem of creating animatable 3D models from casual videos by proposing a hierarchy deformation model with tree-structured bones, resulting in improved reconstruction quality, interpretability, and easier manipulation for arbitrary objects.
We propose a new framework for creating and easily manipulating 3D models of arbitrary objects using casually captured videos. Our core ingredient is a novel hierarchy deformation model, which captures motions of objects with a tree-structured bones. Our hierarchy system decomposes motions based on the granularity and reveals the correlations between parts without exploiting any prior structural knowledge. We further propose to regularize the bones to be positioned at the basis of motions, centers of parts, sufficiently covering related surfaces of the part. This is achieved by our bone occupancy function, which identifies whether a given 3D point is placed within the bone. Coupling the proposed components, our framework offers several clear advantages: (1) users can obtain animatable 3D models of the arbitrary objects in improved quality from their casual videos, (2) users can manipulate 3D models in an intuitive manner with minimal costs, and (3) users can interactively add or delete control points as necessary. The experimental results demonstrate the efficacy of our framework on diverse instances, in reconstruction quality, interpretability and easier manipulation. Our code is available at https://github.com/subin6/HSNB.