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      Neural-Guided RANSAC: Learning Where to Sample Model Hypotheses

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          Abstract

          We present Neural-Guided RANSAC (NG-RANSAC), an extension to the classic RANSAC algorithm from robust optimization. NG-RANSAC uses prior information to improve model hypothesis search, increasing the chance of finding outlier-free minimal sets. Previous works use heuristic side-information like hand-crafted descriptor distance to guide hypothesis search. In contrast, we learn hypothesis search in a principled fashion that lets us optimize an arbitrary task loss during training, leading to large improvements on classic computer vision tasks. We present two further extensions to NG-RANSAC. Firstly, using the inlier count itself as training signal allows us to train neural guidance in a self-supervised fashion. Secondly, we combine neural guidance with differentiable RANSAC to build neural networks which focus on certain parts of the input data and make the output predictions as good as possible. We evaluate NG-RANSAC on a wide array of computer vision tasks, namely estimation of epipolar geometry, horizon line estimation and camera re-localization. We achieve superior or competitive results compared to state-of-the-art robust estimators, including very recent, learned ones.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          10 May 2019
          Article
          1905.04132
          65b9eb61-e23c-4804-a3b8-ce79faf50e6c

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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          cs.CV

          Computer vision & Pattern recognition
          Computer vision & Pattern recognition

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