Learning of 3D Graph Convolution Networks for Point Cloud Analysis

Point clouds are among the popular geometry representations in 3D vision. However, unlike 2D images with pixel-wise layouts, such representations containing unordered data points which make the processing and understanding the associated semantic information quite challenging. Although a number of p...

Celý popis

Uložené v:
Podrobná bibliografia
Vydané v:IEEE transactions on pattern analysis and machine intelligence Ročník 44; číslo 8; s. 4212 - 4224
Hlavní autori: Lin, Zhi-Hao, Huang, Sheng-Yu, Wang, Yu-Chiang Frank
Médium: Journal Article
Jazyk:English
Vydavateľské údaje: United States IEEE 01.08.2022
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
Predmet:
ISSN:0162-8828, 1939-3539, 2160-9292, 1939-3539
On-line prístup:Získať plný text
Tagy: Pridať tag
Žiadne tagy, Buďte prvý, kto otaguje tento záznam!
Popis
Shrnutí:Point clouds are among the popular geometry representations in 3D vision. However, unlike 2D images with pixel-wise layouts, such representations containing unordered data points which make the processing and understanding the associated semantic information quite challenging. Although a number of previous works attempt to analyze point clouds and achieve promising performances, their performances would degrade significantly when data variations like shift and scale changes are presented. In this paper, we propose 3D graph convolution networks (3D-GCN) , which uniquely learns 3D kernels with graph max-pooling mechanisms for extracting geometric features from point cloud data across different scales. We show that, with the proposed 3D-GCN, satisfactory shift and scale invariance can be jointly achieved. We show that 3D-GCN can be applied to point cloud classification and segmentation tasks, with ablation studies and visualizations verifying the design of 3D-GCN.
Bibliografia:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 14
content type line 23
ISSN:0162-8828
1939-3539
2160-9292
1939-3539
DOI:10.1109/TPAMI.2021.3059758