4.7 Article

Deferred Neural Rendering: Image Synthesis using Neural Textures

期刊

ACM TRANSACTIONS ON GRAPHICS
卷 38, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
DOI: 10.1145/3306346.3323035

关键词

neural rendering; neural texture; novel view synthesis; facial reenactment

资金

  1. AI Foundation
  2. Google
  3. TUM-IAS Rudolf Mossbauer Fellowship
  4. ERC Starting Grant Scan2CAD [804724]
  5. Google Faculty Award
  6. Max Planck Center for Visual Computing and Communications (MPC-VCC)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The modern computer graphics pipeline can synthesize images at remarkable visual quality; however, it requires well-defined, high-quality 3D content as input. In this work, we explore the use of imperfect 3D content, for instance, obtained from photo-metric reconstructions with noisy and incomplete surface geometry, while still aiming to produce photo-realistic (re-)renderings. To address this challenging problem, we introduce Deferred Neural Rendering, a new paradigm for image synthesis that combines the traditional graphics pipeline with learnable components. Specifically, we propose Neural Textures, which are learned feature maps that are trained as part of the scene capture process. Similar to traditional textures, neural textures are stored as maps on top of 3D mesh proxies; however, the high-dimensional feature maps contain significantly more information, which can be interpreted by our new deferred neural rendering pipeline. Both neural textures and deferred neural renderer are trained end-to-end, enabling us to synthesize photo-realistic images even when the original 3D content was imperfect. In contrast to traditional, black-box 2D generative neural networks, our 3D representation gives us explicit control over the generated output, and allows for a wide range of application domains. For instance, we can synthesize temporally-consistent video re-renderings of recorded 3D scenes as our representation is inherently embedded in 3D space. This way, neural textures can be utilized to coherently re-render or manipulate existing video content in both static and dynamic environments at real-time rates. We show the effectiveness of our approach in several experiments on novel view synthesis, scene editing, and facial reenactment, and compare to state-of-the-art approaches that leverage the standard graphics pipeline as well as conventional generative neural networks.

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