Computer vision has come a long way since Imagenet, a large, open-source data set of labeled images, was released in 2009 for researchers to use to train AI—but images with tricky or bad lighting can still confuse algorithms. Researchers have either tried to employ hand-crafted rules about how light interacts with objects or used a data set that covers as many lighting situations as possible. But there is a nearly limitless combination of items and light in the real world, handicapping both approaches.
A new paper by researchers from MIT and DeepMind details a process that can identify images in different lighting without having to hand-code rules or train on a huge data set. The process, called a rendered intrinsics network (RIN), automatically separates an image into reflectance, shape, and lighting layers. It then recombines the layers into a reconstruction of the original image.
To train RIN, the researchers created a data set of five shapes—cubes, spheres, cones, cylinders, and toruses—and rendered each with 10 different orientations and 500 different colors. As a proof of concept, the researchers showed how breaking down an image into the three layers could help a computer identify what an item in an image is, or infer its shape. For example, the model learned to spot much more complicated items—like the classic image test models Stanford bunny, Utah teapot, and Blender’s Suzanne—after being trained on the basic sample shapes, without ever seeing labeled examples.
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