DepthMamba with Adaptive Fusion
This addresses robustness issues in depth estimation for real-world applications like autonomous driving where ideal camera poses are unavailable.
The paper tackles the problem of multi-view depth estimation failing under noisy camera poses by proposing a two-branch network that fuses single-view and multi-view depth results, achieving competitive performance on KITTI and DDAD benchmarks.
Multi-view depth estimation has achieved impressive performance over various benchmarks. However, almost all current multi-view systems rely on given ideal camera poses, which are unavailable in many real-world scenarios, such as autonomous driving. In this work, we propose a new robustness benchmark to evaluate the depth estimation system under various noisy pose settings. Surprisingly, we find current multi-view depth estimation methods or single-view and multi-view fusion methods will fail when given noisy pose settings. To tackle this challenge, we propose a two-branch network architecture which fuses the depth estimation results of single-view and multi-view branch. In specific, we introduced mamba to serve as feature extraction backbone and propose an attention-based fusion methods which adaptively select the most robust estimation results between the two branches. Thus, the proposed method can perform well on some challenging scenes including dynamic objects, texture-less regions, etc. Ablation studies prove the effectiveness of the backbone and fusion method, while evaluation experiments on challenging benchmarks (KITTI and DDAD) show that the proposed method achieves a competitive performance compared to the state-of-the-art methods.