Title :
Shape, Illumination, and Reflectance from Shading
Author :
Barron, Jonathan T. ; Malik, Jitendra
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA
Abstract :
A fundamental problem in computer vision is that of inferring the intrinsic, 3D structure of the world from flat, 2D images of that world. Traditional methods for recovering scene properties such as shape, reflectance, or illumination rely on multiple observations of the same scene to overconstrain the problem. Recovering these same properties from a single image seems almost impossible in comparison-there are an infinite number of shapes, paint, and lights that exactly reproduce a single image. However, certain explanations are more likely than others: surfaces tend to be smooth, paint tends to be uniform, and illumination tends to be natural. We therefore pose this problem as one of statistical inference, and define an optimization problem that searches for the most likely explanation of a single image. Our technique can be viewed as a superset of several classic computer vision problems (shape-from-shading, intrinsic images, color constancy, illumination estimation, etc) and outperforms all previous solutions to those constituent problems.
Keywords :
computer vision; image colour analysis; 2D images; 3D structure; color constancy; computer vision; illumination estimation; image explanation; intrinsic images; paint; reflectance; scene properties; shape-from-shading; Computer vision; GSM; Image color analysis; Lighting; Optimization; Paints; Shape; Color Constancy; Computer Vision; Computer vision; Intrinsic Images; Machine Learning; Shape Estimation; Shape from Shading; color constancy; intrinsic images; machine learning; shape estimation; shape from shading;
Journal_Title :
Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPAMI.2014.2377712