Abstract:Reinforcement Learning (RL) algorithms suffer from the dependency on accurately engineered reward functions to properly guide the learning agents to do the required tasks. Preference-based reinforcement learning (PbRL) addresses that by utilizing human preferences as feedback from the experts instead of numeric rewards. Due to its promising advantage over traditional RL, PbRL has gained more focus in recent years with many significant advances. In this survey, we present a unified PbRL framework to include the newly emerging approaches that improve the scalability and efficiency of PbRL. In addition, we give a detailed overview of the theoretical guarantees and benchmarking work done in the field, while presenting its recent applications in complex real-world tasks. Lastly, we go over the limitations of the current approaches and the proposed future research directions.
Abstract:Novel view synthesis (NVS) of multi-human scenes imposes challenges due to the complex inter-human occlusions. Layered representations handle the complexities by dividing the scene into multi-layered radiance fields, however, they are mainly constrained to per-scene optimization making them inefficient. Generalizable human view synthesis methods combine the pre-fitted 3D human meshes with image features to reach generalization, yet they are mainly designed to operate on single-human scenes. Another drawback is the reliance on multi-step optimization techniques for parametric pre-fitting of the 3D body models that suffer from misalignment with the images in sparse view settings causing hallucinations in synthesized views. In this work, we propose, GenLayNeRF, a generalizable layered scene representation for free-viewpoint rendering of multiple human subjects which requires no per-scene optimization and very sparse views as input. We divide the scene into multi-human layers anchored by the 3D body meshes. We then ensure pixel-level alignment of the body models with the input views through a novel end-to-end trainable module that carries out iterative parametric correction coupled with multi-view feature fusion to produce aligned 3D models. For NVS, we extract point-wise image-aligned and human-anchored features which are correlated and fused using self-attention and cross-attention modules. We augment low-level RGB values into the features with an attention-based RGB fusion module. To evaluate our approach, we construct two multi-human view synthesis datasets; DeepMultiSyn and ZJU-MultiHuman. The results indicate that our proposed approach outperforms generalizable and non-human per-scene NeRF methods while performing at par with layered per-scene methods without test time optimization.
Abstract:Novel view synthesis is a long-standing problem that revolves around rendering frames of scenes from novel camera viewpoints. Volumetric approaches provide a solution for modeling occlusions through the explicit 3D representation of the camera frustum. Multi-plane Images (MPI) are volumetric methods that represent the scene using front-parallel planes at distinct depths but suffer from depth discretization leading to a 2.D scene representation. Another line of approach relies on implicit 3D scene representations. Neural Radiance Fields (NeRF) utilize neural networks for encapsulating the continuous 3D scene structure within the network weights achieving photorealistic synthesis results, however, methods are constrained to per-scene optimization settings which are inefficient in practice. Multi-plane Neural Radiance Fields (MINE) open the door for combining implicit and explicit scene representations. It enables continuous 3D scene representations, especially in the depth dimension, while utilizing the input image features to avoid per-scene optimization. The main drawback of the current literature work in this domain is being constrained to single-view input, limiting the synthesis ability to narrow viewpoint ranges. In this work, we thoroughly examine the performance, generalization, and efficiency of single-view multi-plane neural radiance fields. In addition, we propose a new multiplane NeRF architecture that accepts multiple views to improve the synthesis results and expand the viewing range. Features from the input source frames are effectively fused through a proposed attention-aware fusion module to highlight important information from different viewpoints. Experiments show the effectiveness of attention-based fusion and the promising outcomes of our proposed method when compared to multi-view NeRF and MPI techniques.