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D3Feat repository

TensorFlow implementation of D3Feat for CVPR'2020 Oral paper "D3Feat: Joint Learning of Dense Detection and Description of 3D Local Features", by Xuyang Bai, Zixin Luo, Lei Zhou, Hongbo Fu, Long Quan and Chiew-Lan Tai.

This paper focus on dense feature detection and description for 3D point clouds in a joint manner. If you find this project useful, please cite:

@article{bai2020d3feat,
  title={D3Feat: Joint Learning of Dense Detection and Description of 3D Local Features},
  author={Xuyang Bai, Zixin Luo, Lei Zhou, Hongbo Fu, Long Quan and Chiew-Lan Tai},
  journal={arXiv:2003.03164 [cs.CV]},
  year={2020}
}

The PyTorch implementation can be found here.

Check our new paper on outlier rejection for more robust registration here !

Introduction

A successful point cloud registration often lies on robust establishment of sparse matches through discriminative 3D local features. Despite the fast evolution of learning-based 3D feature descriptors, little attention has been drawn to the learning of 3D feature detectors, even less for a joint learning of the two tasks. In this paper, we leverage a 3D fully convolutional network for 3D point clouds, and propose a novel and practical learning mechanism that densely predicts both a detection score and a description feature for each 3D point. In particular, we propose a keypoint selection strategy that overcomes the inherent density variations of 3D point clouds, and further propose a self-supervised detector loss guided by the on-the-fly feature matching results during training. Finally, our method achieves state-of-the-art results in both indoor and outdoor scenarios, evaluated on 3DMatch and KITTI datasets, and shows its strong generalization ability on the ETH dataset. Towards practical use, we show that by adopting a reliable feature detector, sampling a smaller number of features is sufficient to achieve accurate and fast point cloud alignment.

fig1

Installation

The code is heavily borrowed from KPConv. You can find the guidance for compiling the tensorflow operators and C++ wrappers in INSTALL.md.

Demo

We provide a small demo to extract dense feature and detection score for two point cloud, and register them using RANSAC. The ply files are saved in the demo_data folder, which can be replaced by your own data. Now we are using two point cloud fragments from 3DMatch dataset. To try the demo, please run

    python demo_registration.py

It will compute the descriptors and detection scores using the released weight on 3DMatch dataset, and save them in .npz file in demo_data. These descriptors are then used to estimate the rigid-body transformation parameters using RANSAC. Visualization of the inital state and registered state will show up.

demo

We also visualize the detected keypoints on two point cloud.

demo

Dataset Download

3DMatch

The training set of 3DMatch[1] can be downloaded from here. It is generated by datasets/cal_overlap.py which select all the point cloud fragments pairs having more than 30% overlap.

The test set point clouds and the evaluation files(for registration recall) can be downloaded from 3DMatch Geometric Registration website.

Please put the training set under data/3DMatch folder and the test set under data/3DMatch/fragments. And I have already put the ground truth poses in the geometric_registration/gt_result folder.

KITTI

The training and test set can be download from KITTI Odometry website. I follow the FCGF[3] for pre-processing.

ETH

The test set (we only use ETH dataset to evaluate the generalization ability of our method) can be downloaded from here. Detail instructions can be found in PerfectMatch[2].

Instructions to training and testing

3DMatch

The training on 3DMatch dataset can be done by running

python training_3dmatch.py

This file contains a configuration subclass ThreeDMatchConfig, inherited from the general configuration class Config defined in utils/config.py. The value of every parameter can be modified in the subclass. The default path to 3DMatch training set is data/3DMatch, which can be changed in dataset/ThreeDMatch.py.

The testing with the pretrained models on 3DMatch can by easily done by changing the path of log in test_3dmatch.py file

chosen_log = 'path_to_pretrained_log'

and runing

python test_3dmatch.py

The descriptors and detection scores for each point will be generated and saved in geometric_registration/D3Feat_{timestr}/ folder. Then the Feature Matching Recall and inlier ratio can be caluclated by running

cd geometric_registration/
python evaluate.py D3Feat [timestr of the model]

The Registration Recall can be calculated by running the evaluate.m in geometric_registration/3dmatch which are provided by 3DMatch. You need to modify the descriptorName to D3Feat_{timestr} in the geometric_registration/3dmatch/evaluate.m file. You can change the number of keypoints in evaluate.py

KITTI

Similarly, the training and testing of KITTI data set can be done by running

python training_KITTI.py

And

python test_KITTI.py

The detected keypoints and scores for each fragment, as well as the estimated transformation matrix between each ground truth pair will be saved in geometric_registration_kitti/D3Feat_{timestr}/ folder. Then the Relative Rotation Error and Relative Translation Error will be calculated by comparing the ground truth pose and estimated pose. The code of this part is heavily borrowed from FCGF[3]. You can change the number of keypoints in utils/test.py.

Keypoint Repeatability

After generating the descriptors and detection scores (which will be saved in geometric_registration or geometric_registration_kitti), the keypoint repeatbility can be calculated by running

cd repeatability/
python evaluate_3dmatch_our.py D3Feat [timestr of the model]

or

cd repeatability/
python evaluate_kitti_our.py D3Feat [timestr of the model]

Pretrained Model

We provide the pre-trained model of 3DMatch in results/ and KITTI in results_kitti/.

Post-Conference Update

References

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[1] 3DMatch: Learning Local Geometric Descriptors from RGB-D Reconstructions, Andy Zeng, Shuran Song, Matthias Nießner, Matthew Fisher, Jianxiong Xiao, and Thomas Funkhouser, CVPR 2017.

[2] The Perfect Match: 3D Point Cloud Matching with Smoothed Densities, Zan Gojcic, Caifa Zhou, Jan D. Wegner, and Andreas Wieser, CVPR 2019.

[3] Fully Convolutional Geometric Features: Christopher Choy and Jaesik Park and Vladlen Koltun, ICCV 2019.