Difference between revisions of "ReadingGroup"

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Here the same authors focus on a related problem, that of determining open spaces for guiding a vehicle, again using machine learning techniques.
 
Here the same authors focus on a related problem, that of determining open spaces for guiding a vehicle, again using machine learning techniques.
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This version of the paper might be of higher quality:
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http://ai.stanford.edu/~asaxena/rccar/ICML_ObstacleAvoidance.pdf
  
 
== Karsch, Liu & Kang: Depth Transfer ==
 
== Karsch, Liu & Kang: Depth Transfer ==

Revision as of 07:47, 21 September 2017

Getting involved

There is now a mailing list for this reading group. Send me (Damien) an email to get on it. No problem.

Note: this reading group is about deep learning as applied to depth estimation from a single image - one of the super hot topics. If your interest is deep learning in general, you may find some of the readings a little bit off-topic. So let me know if you want some idea about which you should read for.

Proposed Schedule

The below schedule is only proposed, and subject to change.

  • 14 Sept 8.30am: Foley & Maitlin Chapter 6: Distance & Size Perception
    • Location: EEBF 4302
  • 21 Sept 8.30am: Saxena, Min & Ng: Make3D
    • Location: EEBF 4302
  • 28 Sept 8.30am: Michels, Saxena & Ng: High speed obstacle avoidance
    • Location: EEBF 4302
  • 05 Octr 8.30am: Karsch, Liu & Kang: Depth Transfer
    • Location: EEBF 4302
  • 12 Octr 8.30am: LeCun, Bengio & Hinton: Deep Learning Review
  • 19 Octr 8.30am: LeCun, Bottou, Bengio & Haffner: CNNs
  • 26 Octr 8.30am: Simonyan & Zisserman: VGG-16
  • Week of 02 Novr: Break
  • 09 Novr 8.30am: Eigen, Puhrsch & Fergus: Depth map prediction
  • 16 Novr 8.30am: Shelhamer, Long & Darrell: Fully Convolutional Segmentation
  • 23 Novr 8.30am: He, Zhang, Ren & Sun: ResNet
  • 30 Novr 8.30am: Girshick, Donahue, Darrell & Malik: R-CNN
  • 07 Decr 8.30am: Liao, Huang, Wang, Kodagoda, Yu & Liu: Fuse with laser
  • 14 Decr 8.30am: Giuisti et al.: Forest trails CNN
  • Week of 21 Decr: Break
  • Week of 25 Decr: Cao, Wu & Shen: Fully convolutional depth 1
  • Week of 01 Jany: Laina et al.: Fully convolutional depth 2
  • Week of 08 Jany: Li, Klein & Yao: Fully convolutional depth 3
  • Week of 15 Jany: Luo et al.: Deep Learning + Stereo
  • Week of 22 Jany: Break
  • Week of 29 Jany: Break
  • Week of 06 Febr: Goodfellow et al.: Generative Adversarial Nets
  • Week of 13 Febr: Dosovitskiy, Springenberg, Tatarchenko & Brox: Generating images
  • Week of 20 Febr: Oord et al.: Pixel-RNN and Pixel-CNN
  • Week of 27 Febr: Isola et al. Pix2Pix

Details

Foley & Maitlin Chapter 6 - Distance & Size Perception

Because our project is about using machine learning to extract depth from a single image (with deep learning, then applying it to robot problems) it pays to learn a bit about how humans do it...

https://books.google.com.tr/books?id=jLBmCgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover

Go to Chapter 6.

If that doesn't work (some have reported finding it difficult to access Chapter 6), try the following link: http://tinyurl.com/yalnnwp9 - some have reported being able to access the chapter by doing a google search for content.

Another thing to try that has worked for some is to log out of any google/gmail account before trying to access.

If nothing else works, email me.

Saxena, Min & Ng: Make3D

http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=4531745

This is the classic paper that brought machine learning to the problem of depth from a single image, quite successfully, considering previous attempts. It uses Markov Random Fields, which are a bit advanced but, importantly, quite slow.

Note: because our library has a subscription to IEEE Xplore, you can access the above link from on-campus or via off-campus library access or via VPN.

But, here is an alternative link: http://www.cs.cornell.edu/~asaxena/reconstruction3d/saxena_make3d_learning3dstructure.pdf

There are some videos and things available here: http://make3d.cs.cornell.edu/ -- there used to be a live online demo but they've closed that. There is also a list of results on the Make3D dataset up till about 2012: http://make3d.cs.cornell.edu/results_stateoftheart.html

After that other datasets started being used also.

Superpixels are used in the study. Here is a quick intro to them: http://ttic.uchicago.edu/~xren/research/superpixel/

MRFs are more difficult and if anybody has seen a good tutorial for them let me know so that I can link to it here. The best I could find is https://mitpress.mit.edu/sites/default/files/titles/content/9780262015776_sch_0001.pdf but it is still a bit difficult. We will probably end up discussing what MRFs are a lot on Thursday.

Michels, Saxena & Ng: High speed obstacle avoidance

http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1102426

Here the same authors focus on a related problem, that of determining open spaces for guiding a vehicle, again using machine learning techniques.

This version of the paper might be of higher quality:

http://ai.stanford.edu/~asaxena/rccar/ICML_ObstacleAvoidance.pdf

Karsch, Liu & Kang: Depth Transfer

http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=5551153

http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=6787109

This is a nonparametric approach to depth from a single image. They search a database of images similar to the observed one then warp the image retrieved from the database to estimate the depth of the current image.

LeCun, Bengio & Hinton: Deep Learning Review

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v521/n7553/full/nature14539.html?foxtrotcallback=true

A whirlwind compressed intro to deep learning and its parts.

LeCun, Bottou, Bengio & Haffner: CNNs

http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/726791/

Here is the classic paper applying convolutional neural networks to image processing.

Krizhevsky, Sutskever & Hinton: ImageNet/AlexNet

https://papers.nips.cc/paper/4824-imagenet-classification-with-deep-convolutional-neural-networks.pdf

Here is when convolutional neural networks and deep learning really showed what it could do - the problem of image recognition.

But we won't use this because a lot of the complexity it introduces turns out not to be necessary. Later methods are "cleaner".

Simonyan & Zisserman: VGG-16

http://arxiv.org/abs/1409.1556

A relatively recent "deep" deep net with 16 layers for image recognition. Note: successful recent networks have one thousand layers.

Eigen, Puhrsch & Fergus: Depth map prediction

https://www.cs.nyu.edu/~deigen/depth/

Finally, we apply deep neural convolutional networks to the problem that we are interested in.

Shelhamer, Long & Darrell: Fully Convolutional Segmentation

http://arxiv.org/abs/1605.06211

Here a related problem is solved, that of semantic segmentation, but this approach is applicable to our problem.

Loffe & Szegedy: Batch Normalization

https://arxiv.org/abs/1502.03167

A recent technique that has enabled powerful new methods and ultimately much deeper neural networks. Important stuff.

He, Zhang, Ren & Sun: ResNets

https://arxiv.org/abs/1512.03385

This work and variations on it have been the basis of the 1000 layer recent neural networks. Important stuff.

Girshick, Donahue, Darrell & Malik: R-CNN

https://arxiv.org/abs/1311.2524

We take a slight seque to check out how tracking has been done recently with neural networks. Note that Faster-RCNN and more recent alternatives use similar principles but do it faster.

Liao, Huang, Wang, Kodagoda, Yu & Liu: Fuse with laser

https://arxiv.org/abs/1611.02174

Here we see an interesting depth-from-single-image sensor fusion with robotics applications.

Giuisti et al.: Forest trails CNN

http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7358076/

See also youtube.

Here we have a CNN-based update to the learn-to-navigate-from-images problem addressed by Saxena et al. above.


Cao, Wu & Shen: Fully convolutional depth 1

http://arxiv.org/abs/1605.02305

Here we start a series of recent papers that take different approaches using deep nets to depth from a single image.

Laina et al.: Fully convolutional depth 2

http://arxiv.org/abs/1606.00373

Here we continue a series of recent papers that take different approaches using deep nets to depth from a single image.

Li, Klein & Yao: Fully convolutional depth 3

http://arxiv.org/abs/1607.00730

Here we finalise a series of recent papers that take different approaches using deep nets to depth from a single image.

Luo et al.: Deep Learning + Stereo

Combining deep learning and stereo.

https://www.cs.toronto.edu/~urtasun/publications/luo_etal_cvpr16.pdf

Goodfellow et al.: Generative Adversarial Nets

https://papers.nips.cc/paper/5423-generative-adversarial-nets

Another important recent development that we may make use of.

Dosovitskiy, Springenberg, Tatarchenko & Brox: Generating images

https://arxiv.org/abs/1411.5928

A non-adversarial approach to the same problem.

Oord et al.: Pixel-RNN & Pixel-CNN

https://arxiv.org/abs/1601.06759

Producing distributions over images. We have always intended to do something like this for depth images.

http://arxiv.org/abs/1606.05328

Isola et al. Pix2Pix

https://arxiv.org/abs/1611.07004

We can use this too. And it's cool.

List of interested people

(who I will contact with information about the schedule etc.)

  • Abdulmajeed M. K.
  • Alican M.
  • Anas M.
  • K. Bulut Ö.
  • Imaduddin A. M.
  • Tolga C.
  • Bilge A.
  • Hatice K.
  • Hossein P.
  • Torkan G.
  • Buse Sibel K.
  • Oğuzhan C.
  • M. Alperen Ö.
  • Hatice K.
  • Özgür Ö.
  • Doğay K.
  • Onur A.
  • Alper K.
  • Furkan A.
  • Elena B. S.
  • Müjde A.
  • Emeç E.

Additional Resources

EBook: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/DeepLearning-NowPublishing-Vol7-SIG-039.pdf Deep Learning: Methods and Applications by Li Deng and Dong Yu