Robust SG-NeRF: Robust Scene Graph Aided Neural Surface Reconstruction
This addresses a specific bottleneck in neural surface reconstruction for 3D vision applications, offering incremental improvements over existing pose-NeRF methods.
The paper tackles the problem of neural surface reconstruction being sensitive to outlier camera poses by integrating scene graph information and a detached color network to better distinguish inlier from outlier poses, achieving consistent improvements in reconstruction quality and pose accuracy on SG-NeRF and DTU datasets.
Neural surface reconstruction relies heavily on accurate camera poses as input. Despite utilizing advanced pose estimators like COLMAP or ARKit, camera poses can still be noisy. Existing pose-NeRF joint optimization methods handle poses with small noise (inliers) effectively but struggle with large noise (outliers), such as mirrored poses. In this work, we focus on mitigating the impact of outlier poses. Our method integrates an inlier-outlier confidence estimation scheme, leveraging scene graph information gathered during the data preparation phase. Unlike previous works directly using rendering metrics as the reference, we employ a detached color network that omits the viewing direction as input to minimize the impact caused by shape-radiance ambiguities. This enhanced confidence updating strategy effectively differentiates between inlier and outlier poses, allowing us to sample more rays from inlier poses to construct more reliable radiance fields. Additionally, we introduce a re-projection loss based on the current Signed Distance Function (SDF) and pose estimations, strengthening the constraints between matching image pairs. For outlier poses, we adopt a Monte Carlo re-localization method to find better solutions. We also devise a scene graph updating strategy to provide more accurate information throughout the training process. We validate our approach on the SG-NeRF and DTU datasets. Experimental results on various datasets demonstrate that our methods can consistently improve the reconstruction qualities and pose accuracies.