Mirror and Glass Detection/Segmentation
In this project, we are developing techniques for mirror and glass detection/segmentation. While a mirror is a reflective surface that reflects the scene in front of it, glass is a transparent surface that transmits the scene from the back side and often also reflects the scene in front of it too. In general, both mirrors and glass do not have their own visual appearances. They only reflect/transmit the appearances of their surroundings.
As mirrors and glass do not have their own appearances, it is not straightforward to develop automatic algorithms to detect and segment them. However, as they appear everywhere in our daily life, it can be problematic if we are not able to detect them reliably. For example, a vision-based depth sensor may falsely estimate the depth of a piece of mirror/glass as the depth of the objects inside it, a robot may not be aware of the presence of a mirror/glass wall, and a drone may collide into a high rise (noted that most high rises are covered by glass these days).
To the best of our knowledge, my team is the first to develop computational models for automatic detection and segmentation of mirror and transparent glass surfaces. Although there have been some works that investigate the detection of transparent glass objects, these methods mainly focus on detecting wine glass and small glass objects, which have some special visual properties that can be used for detection. Unlike these works, we are more interested in detecting general glass surfaces that may not possess any special properties of their own.
We are also interested in exploring the application of our mirror/glass detection methods in autonomous navigation.
[paper] | [suppl]| [code] | [dataset]
Jiaying Lin, Guodong Wang, and Rynson Lau
Proc. IEEE CVPR, June 2020
Figure 1. Visualization of our progressive approach to recognizing mirrors from a single image. By finding correspondences between objects inside and outside of the mirror and then explicitly locating the miror edges, we can detect the mirror region more reliably.
Input-Output:Given an input image, our network outputs a binary mask that indicate where mirrors are.
Abstract. The mirror detection problem is important as mirrors can affect the performances of many vision tasks. It is a difficult problemsince it requires an understanding of global scene semantics. Recently, a method was proposed to detect mirrors by learning multi-level contextual contrasts between inside and outside of mirrors, which helps locate mirror edges implicitly. We observe that the content of a mirror reflects the content of its surrounding, separated by the edge of the mirror. Hence, we propose a model in this paper to progressively learn the content similarity between the inside and outside of the mirror while explicitly detecting the mirror edges. Our work has two main contributions. First, we propose a new relational contextual contrasted local (RCCL) module to extract and compare the mirror features with its corresponding context features, and an edge detection and fusion (EDF) module to learn the features of mirror edges in complex scenes via explicit supervision. Second, we construct a challenging benchmark dataset of 6,461 mirror images. Unlike the existing MSD dataset, which has limited diversity, our dataset covers a variety of scenes and is much larger in scale. Experimental results show that our model outperforms relevant state-of-the-art methods.
[paper] | [suppl] | [code] | [dataset]
Haiyang Mei, Xin Yang, Yang Wang, Yuanyuan Liu, Shengfeng He, Qiang Zhang, Xiaopeng Wei, and Rynson Lau
Proc. IEEE CVPR, June 2020
Figure 2. Problems with glass in existing vision tasks. In depth prediction, existing method [16] wrongly predicts the depth of the scene behind the glass, instead of the depth to the glass (1st row of (b)). For instance segmentation, Mask RCNN [9] only segments the instances behind the glass, not aware that they are actually behind the glass (2nd row of (b)). Besides, if we directly apply an existing singe-image reflection removal (SIRR) method [36] to an image that is only partially covered by glass, the non-glass region can be corrupted (3rd row of (b)). GDNet can detect the glass (c) and then correct these failure cases (d).
Input-Output:Given an input image, our network outputs a binary mask that indicate where transparent glass regions are.
Abstract. Transparent glass is very common in our daily life. Existing computer vision systems neglect it and thus may have severe consequences, e.g., a robot may crash into a glass wall. However, sensing the presence of glass is not straightforward. The key challenge is that arbitrary objects/scenes can appear behind the glass, and the content within the glass region is typically similar to those behind it. In this paper, we propose an important problem of detecting glass from a single RGB image. To address this problem, we construct a large-scale glass detection dataset (GDD) and design a glass detection network, called GDNet, which explores abundant contextual cues for robust glass detection with a novel large-field contextual feature integration (LCFI) module. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed method achieves more superior glass detection results on our GDD test set than state-of-the-art methods fine-tuned for glass detection.
[paper] | [suppl]| [code and updated] | [dataset]
Xin Yang\*, Haiyang Mei\*, Ke Xu, Xiaopeng Wei, Baocai Yin, and Rynson Lau (\* joint first authors)
Proc. IEEE ICCV, Oct. 2019
Figure 3. Problems with mirrors in existing vision tasks. In depth prediction, NYU-v2 dataset [32] uses a Kinect to capture depth as ground truth. It wrongly predicts the depths of the reflected contents, instead of the mirror depths (b). In instance semantic segmentation, Mask RCNN [12] wrongly detects objects inside the mirrors (c). With MirrorNet, we first detect and mask out the mirrors (d). We then obtain the correct depths (e), by interpolating the depths from surrounding pixels of the mirrors, and segmentation maps (f).
Input-Output:Given an input image, our network outputs a binary mask that indicate where mirrors are.
Abstract. Mirrors are everywhere in our daily lives. Existing computer vision systems do not consider mirrors, and hence may get confused by the reflected content inside a mirror, resulting in a severe performance degradation. However, separating the real content outside a mirror from the reflected content inside it is non-trivial. The key challenge is that mirrors typically reflect contents similar to their surroundings, making it very difficult to differentiate the two. In this paper, we present a novel method to segment mirrors from an input image. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to address the mirror segmentation problem with a computational approach. We make the following contributions. First, we construct a large-scale mirror dataset that contains mirror images with corresponding manually annotated masks. This dataset covers a variety of daily life scenes, and will be made publicly available for future research. Second, we propose a novel network, called MirrorNet, for mirror segmentation, by modeling both semantical and low-level color/texture discontinuities between the contents inside and outside of the mirrors. Third, we conduct extensive experiments to evaluate the proposed method, and show that it outperforms the carefully chosen baselines from the state-of-the-art detection and segmentation methods.
Hopefully, feel free to CONTRIBUTE. I'd like to appreciate the open source contributors of the above data sincerely.