PromptStereo: Zero-Shot Stereo Matching via Structure and Motion Prompts
This addresses the challenge of zero-shot generalization in stereo matching for computer vision applications, representing an incremental improvement over existing methods.
The paper tackles the problem of zero-shot stereo matching by proposing PromptStereo, which uses structure and motion prompts to improve iterative refinement, achieving state-of-the-art generalization performance across multiple datasets with comparable or faster inference speed.
Modern stereo matching methods have leveraged monocular depth foundation models to achieve superior zero-shot generalization performance. However, most existing methods primarily focus on extracting robust features for cost volume construction or disparity initialization. At the same time, the iterative refinement stage, which is also crucial for zero-shot generalization, remains underexplored. Some methods treat monocular depth priors as guidance for iteration, but conventional GRU-based architectures struggle to exploit them due to the limited representation capacity. In this paper, we propose Prompt Recurrent Unit (PRU), a novel iterative refinement module based on the decoder of monocular depth foundation models. By integrating monocular structure and stereo motion cues as prompts into the decoder, PRU enriches the latent representations of monocular depth foundation models with absolute stereo-scale information while preserving their inherent monocular depth priors. Experiments demonstrate that our PromptStereo achieves state-of-the-art zero-shot generalization performance across multiple datasets, while maintaining comparable or faster inference speed. Our findings highlight prompt-guided iterative refinement as a promising direction for zero-shot stereo matching.