AIM 2024 Sparse Neural Rendering Challenge: Methods and Results
It addresses the problem of generating realistic 3D scenes from limited views for computer vision researchers, but is incremental as it focuses on benchmarking existing methods.
This paper reviews a challenge on sparse neural rendering for novel view synthesis from sparse image observations, reporting results from 5 teams on a very sparse track and 4 teams on a sparse track, with models that push state-of-the-art boundaries.
This paper reviews the challenge on Sparse Neural Rendering that was part of the Advances in Image Manipulation (AIM) workshop, held in conjunction with ECCV 2024. This manuscript focuses on the competition set-up, the proposed methods and their respective results. The challenge aims at producing novel camera view synthesis of diverse scenes from sparse image observations. It is composed of two tracks, with differing levels of sparsity; 3 views in Track 1 (very sparse) and 9 views in Track 2 (sparse). Participants are asked to optimise objective fidelity to the ground-truth images as measured via the Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio (PSNR) metric. For both tracks, we use the newly introduced Sparse Rendering (SpaRe) dataset and the popular DTU MVS dataset. In this challenge, 5 teams submitted final results to Track 1 and 4 teams submitted final results to Track 2. The submitted models are varied and push the boundaries of the current state-of-the-art in sparse neural rendering. A detailed description of all models developed in the challenge is provided in this paper.