Camera Height Doesn't Change: Unsupervised Training for Metric Monocular Road-Scene Depth Estimation
Genki Kinoshita*, Ko Nishino
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Abstract
"In this paper, we introduce a novel training method for making any monocular depth network learn absolute scale and estimate metric road-scene depth just from regular training data, , driving videos. We refer to this training framework as FUMET. The key idea is to leverage cars found on the road as sources of scale supervision and to incorporate them in network training robustly. FUMET detects and estimates the sizes of cars in a frame and aggregates scale information extracted from them into an estimate of the camera height whose consistency across the entire video sequence is enforced as scale supervision. This realizes robust unsupervised training of any, otherwise scale-oblivious, monocular depth network so that they become not only scale-aware but also metric-accurate without the need for auxiliary sensors and extra supervision. Extensive experiments on the KITTI and the Cityscapes datasets show the effectiveness of FUMET, which achieves state-of-the-art accuracy. We also show that FUMET enables training on mixed datasets of different camera heights, which leads to larger-scale training and better generalization. Metric depth reconstruction is essential in any road-scene visual modeling, and FUMET democratizes its deployment by establishing the means to convert any model into a metric depth estimator."
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