CVFeb 9, 2025

A 3D Multimodal Feature for Infrastructure Anomaly Detection

arXiv:2502.05779v12 citationsh-index: 15Has CodeAutom Constr
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

It addresses infrastructure inspection for civil engineers by offering a method with minimal data requirements, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing anomaly detection algorithms.

This study tackled the problem of detecting small cracks and other anomalies in ageing infrastructure by proposing a novel 3D multimodal feature, 3DMulti-FPFHI, which improved crack detection and enabled identification of water ingress in point clouds of real structures.

Ageing structures require periodic inspections to identify structural defects. Previous work has used geometric distortions to locate cracks in synthetic masonry bridge point clouds but has struggled to detect small cracks. To address this limitation, this study proposes a novel 3D multimodal feature, 3DMulti-FPFHI, that combines a customized Fast Point Feature Histogram (FPFH) with an intensity feature. This feature is integrated into the PatchCore anomaly detection algorithm and evaluated through statistical and parametric analyses. The method is further evaluated using point clouds of a real masonry arch bridge and a full-scale experimental model of a concrete tunnel. Results show that the 3D intensity feature enhances inspection quality by improving crack detection; it also enables the identification of water ingress which introduces intensity anomalies. The 3DMulti-FPFHI outperforms FPFH and a state-of-the-art multimodal anomaly detection method. The potential of the method to address diverse infrastructure anomaly detection scenarios is highlighted by the minimal requirements for data compared to learning-based methods. The code and related point cloud dataset are available at https://github.com/Jingyixiong/3D-Multi-FPFHI.

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