H3DNet: 3D Object Detection Using Hybrid Geometric Primitives

Created by Zaiwei Zhang, Haitao Yang, Bo Sun and Qixing Huang.

overview

Introduction

This repository is code release for our paper (arXiv report here).

We introduce H3DNet, which takes a colorless 3D point cloud as input and outputs a collection of oriented object bounding boxes (or BB) and their semantic labels. The critical idea of H3DNet is to predict a hybrid set of geometric primitives, i.e., BB centers, BB face centers, and BB edge centers. We show how to convert the predicted geometric primitives into object proposals by defining a distance function between an object and the geometric primitives. This distance function enables continuous optimization of object proposals, and its local minimums provide high-fidelity object proposals. H3DNet then utilizes a matching and refinement module to classify object proposals into detected objects and fine-tune the geometric parameters of the detected objects. The hybrid set of geometric primitives not only provides more accurate signals for object detection than using a single type of geometric primitives, but it also provides an overcomplete set of constraints on the resulting 3D layout. Therefore, H3DNet can tolerate outliers in predicted geometric primitives. Our model achieves state-of-the-art 3D detection results, with only pointclouds input, on two large datasets with real 3D scans, ScanNet and SUN RGB-D.

In this repository, we provide H3DNet model implementation (with Pytorch) as well as data preparation, training and evaluation scripts on SUN RGB-D and ScanNet. Since our model is built on VoteNet, we borrowed a lot of codes from their codebase.

Installation

Since we are built on top of VoteNet, we require similar packages before using our code. Install Pytorch and Tensorflow (for TensorBoard). It is required that you have access to GPUs. Matlab is required to prepare data for SUN RGB-D. The code is tested with Ubuntu 18.04, Pytorch v1.1, TensorFlow v1.14, CUDA 10.0 and cuDNN v7.4.

Compile the CUDA layers for PointNet++, which we used in the backbone network:

cd pointnet2
python setup.py install

Install the following Python dependencies (with pip install):

numpy
matplotlib
scipy
sklearn
opencv-python
plyfile
pytorch=1.1.0
tensorflow-gpu==1.12.0 (only for visualization)
'trimesh>=2.35.39,<2.35.40'
'networkx>=2.2,<2.3'

Training and evaluating

Data preparation

For data preparation, we share the same data pre-processing steps with VoteNet. We provide the processed training and testing data for SUN RGB-D here, and for ScanNet here.

Train and test on SUN RGB-D

To train a new H3DNet model on SUN RGB-D data (depth images):

python train.py --data_path path/to/sunrgbd --dataset sunrgbd --log_dir log_sunrgbd --num_point 40000 --model hdnet --batch_size 8

In order to train in batch_size 8, you will have to use at least 3/4 GPUs. You can use CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0,1,2 to specify which GPU(s) to use. Without specifying CUDA devices, the training will use all the available GPUs and train with data parallel. While training you can check the log_sunrgbd/log_train.txt file on its progress, or use the TensorBoard to see loss curves.

To test the trained model with its checkpoint:

python eval.py --data_path path/to/sunrgbd --dataset sunrgbd --model hdnet --checkpoint_path path/to/checkpoint --dump_dir eval_sunrgbd --cluster_sampling seed_fps --use_3d_nms --use_cls_nms --per_class_proposal

Example results will be dumped in the eval_sunrgbd folder (or any other folder you specify). You can run python eval.py -h to see the full options for evaluation. After the evaluation, you can use MeshLab to visualize the predicted votes and 3D bounding boxes (select wireframe mode to view the boxes). Final evaluation results will be printed on screen and also written in the log_eval.txt file under the dump directory. In default we evaluate with both AP@0.25 and AP@0.5 with 3D IoU on oriented boxes. A properly trained H3DNet should have around 60 mAP@0.25 and 39 mAP@0.5.

Train and test on ScanNet

To train a H3DNet model on Scannet data (fused scan):

python train.py --data_path path/to/scannet_train_detection_data --dataset scannet --log_dir log_scannet --num_point 40000 --model hdnet --batch_size 8

To test the trained model with its checkpoint:

python eval.py --data_path path/to/scannet_train_detection_data --dataset scannet --model hdnet --checkpoint_path path/to/checkpoint --dump_dir eval_scannet --num_point 40000 --cluster_sampling seed_fps --use_3d_nms --use_cls_nms --per_class_proposal

Example results will be dumped in the eval_scannet folder (or any other folder you specify). In default we evaluate with both AP@0.25 and AP@0.5 with 3D IoU on axis aligned boxes. A properly trained H3DNet should have around 67 mAP@0.25 and 48 mAP@0.5.

Visualize predictions and ground truths

Visualization codes for ScanNet and SUN RGB-D are in utils/show_results_scannet.py and utils/show_results_sunrgbd.py saparately.

Before running them, you should change the data paths in the beginning of each script.

To visualize ground truth scenes and bounding boxes of ScanNet, run

python show_results_scannet.py gt

To visualize ground truth scenes and bounding boxes of ScanNet, run

python show_results_scannet.py pred

Usages for SUN RGB-D are just replacing scripts with args unchanged.

License

H3DNet is relased under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for more details.