Abstract

Reconstructing 3D indoor scenes from 2D images has always been an important task in computer vision and graphics applications. For indoor scenes, traditional 3D reconstruction methods have problems such as missing surface details, poor reconstruction of large plane textures and uneven illumination areas, and many wrongly reconstructed floating debris noises in the reconstructed models. This paper proposes a 3D reconstruction method for indoor scenes that combines neural radiation field (NeRFs) and signed distance function (SDF) implicit expressions. The volume density of the NeRF is used to provide geometric information for the SDF field, and the learning of geometric shapes and surfaces is strengthened by adding an adaptive normal prior optimization learning process. It not only preserves the high-quality geometric information of the NeRF, but also uses the SDF to generate an explicit mesh with a smooth surface, significantly improving the reconstruction quality of large plane textures and uneven illumination areas in indoor scenes. At the same time, a new regularization term is designed to constrain the weight distribution, making it an ideal unimodal compact distribution, thereby alleviating the problem of uneven density distribution and achieving the effect of floating debris removal in the final model. Experiments show that the 3D reconstruction effect of this paper on ScanNet, Hypersim, and Replica datasets outperforms the state-of-the-art methods.

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