Generalized non-exponential Gaussian splatting
This research tackles the problem of efficient radiance field rendering and reconstruction, which is significant for computer graphics and rendering applications.
This work generalizes 3D Gaussian splatting to non-exponential alpha-blending operators, achieving similar quality with up to 4x speed-ups in complex real-world captures. The new variants reduce the number of overdraws, resulting in faster rendering times.
In this work we generalize 3D Gaussian splatting (3DGS) to a wider family of physically-based alpha-blending operators. 3DGS has become the standard de-facto for radiance field rendering and reconstruction, given its flexibility and efficiency. At its core, it is based on alpha-blending sorted semitransparent primitives, which in the limit converges to the classic radiative transfer function with exponential transmittance. Inspired by recent research on non-exponential radiative transfer, we generalize the image formation model of 3DGS to non-exponential regimes. Based on this generalization, we use a quadratic transmittance to define sub-linear, linear, and super-linear versions of 3DGS, which exhibit faster-than-exponential decay. We demonstrate that these new non-exponential variants achieve similar quality than the original 3DGS but significantly reduce the number of overdraws, which result on speed-ups of up to $4\times$ in complex real-world captures, on a ray-tracing-based renderer.