Photo-realistic Neural Domain Randomization

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Abstract

Synthetic data is a scalable alternative to manual supervision, but it requires overcoming the sim-to-real domain gap. This discrepancy between virtual and real worlds is addressed by two seemingly opposed approaches: improving the realism of simulation or foregoing realism entirely via domain randomization. In this paper, we show that the recent progress in neural rendering enables a new unified approach we call Photo-realistic Neural Domain Randomization (PNDR). We propose to learn a composition of neural networks that acts as a physics-based ray tracer generating high-quality renderings from scene geometry alone. Our approach is modular, composed of different neural networks for materials, lighting, and rendering, thus enabling randomization of different key image generation components in a differentiable pipeline. Once trained, our method can be combined with other methods and used to generate photo-realistic image augmentations online and significantly more efficiently than via traditional ray-tracing. We demonstrate the usefulness of PNDR through two downstream tasks: 6D object detection and monocular depth estimation. Our experiments show that training with PNDR enables generalization to novel scenes and significantly outperforms the state of the art in terms of real-world transfer.

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APA

Zakharov, S., Ambru, R., Guizilini, V., Kehl, W., & Gaidon, A. (2022). Photo-realistic Neural Domain Randomization. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 13685 LNCS, pp. 310–327). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-19806-9_18

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