WEDepth: Efficient Adaptation of World Knowledge for Monocular Depth Estimation
This addresses the challenging problem of 3D scene reconstruction from single images for computer vision applications, representing an incremental improvement over existing VFM adaptation methods.
The paper tackles monocular depth estimation by adapting Vision Foundation Models without modifying their structures or pretrained weights, achieving state-of-the-art performance on NYU-Depth v2 and KITTI datasets with strong zero-shot transfer capability.
Monocular depth estimation (MDE) has widely applicable but remains highly challenging due to the inherently ill-posed nature of reconstructing 3D scenes from single 2D images. Modern Vision Foundation Models (VFMs), pre-trained on large-scale diverse datasets, exhibit remarkable world understanding capabilities that benefit for various vision tasks. Recent studies have demonstrated significant improvements in MDE through fine-tuning these VFMs. Inspired by these developments, we propose WEDepth, a novel approach that adapts VFMs for MDE without modi-fying their structures and pretrained weights, while effec-tively eliciting and leveraging their inherent priors. Our method employs the VFM as a multi-level feature en-hancer, systematically injecting prior knowledge at differ-ent representation levels. Experiments on NYU-Depth v2 and KITTI datasets show that WEDepth establishes new state-of-the-art (SOTA) performance, achieving competi-tive results compared to both diffusion-based approaches (which require multiple forward passes) and methods pre-trained on relative depth. Furthermore, we demonstrate our method exhibits strong zero-shot transfer capability across diverse scenarios.