/graphics

TensorFlow Graphics: Differentiable Graphics Layers for TensorFlow

Primary LanguagePythonApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

TensorFlow Graphics

License Build Code coverage PyPI project status Supported Python version PyPI release version Downloads

The last few years have seen a rise in novel differentiable graphics layers which can be inserted in neural network architectures. From spatial transformers to differentiable graphics renderers, these new layers leverage the knowledge acquired over years of computer vision and graphics research to build new and more efficient network architectures. Explicitly modeling geometric priors and constraints into neural networks opens up the door to architectures that can be trained robustly, efficiently, and more importantly, in a self-supervised fashion.

Overview

At a high level, a computer graphics pipeline requires a representation of 3D objects and their absolute positioning in the scene, a description of the material they are made of, lights and a camera. This scene description is then interpreted by a renderer to generate a synthetic rendering.

In comparison, a computer vision system would start from an image and try to infer the parameters of the scene. This allows the prediction of which objects are in the scene, what materials they are made of, and their three-dimensional position and orientation.

Training machine learning systems capable of solving these complex 3D vision tasks most often requires large quantities of data. As labelling data is a costly and complex process, it is important to have mechanisms to design machine learning models that can comprehend the three dimensional world while being trained without much supervision. Combining computer vision and computer graphics techniques provides a unique opportunity to leverage the vast amounts of readily available unlabelled data. As illustrated in the image below, this can, for instance, be achieved using analysis by synthesis where the vision system extracts the scene parameters and the graphics system renders back an image based on them. If the rendering matches the original image, the vision system has accurately extracted the scene parameters. In this setup, computer vision and computer graphics go hand in hand, forming a single machine learning system similar to an autoencoder, which can be trained in a self-supervised manner.

Tensorflow Graphics is being developed to help tackle these types of challenges and to do so, it provides a set of differentiable graphics and geometry layers (e.g. cameras, reflectance models, spatial transformations, mesh convolutions) and 3D viewer functionalities (e.g. 3D TensorBoard) that can be used to train and debug your machine learning models of choice.

Installing TensorFlow Graphics

See the install documentation for instructions on how to install TensorFlow Graphics.

API Documentation

You can find the API documentation here.

Compatibility

TensorFlow Graphics is fully compatible with the latest stable release of TensorFlow, tf-nightly, and tf-nightly-2.0-preview. All the functions are compatible with graph and eager execution.

Debugging

Tensorflow Graphics heavily relies on L2 normalized tensors, as well as having the inputs to specific function be in a pre-defined range. Checking for all of this takes cycles, and hence is not activated by default. It is recommended to turn these checks on during a couple epochs of training to make sure that everything behaves as expected. This page provides the instructions to enable these checks.

Colab tutorials

To help you get started with some of the functionalities provided by TF Graphics, some Colab notebooks are available below and roughly ordered by difficulty. These Colabs touch upon a large range of topics including, object pose estimation, interpolation, object materials, lighting, non-rigid surface deformation, spherical harmonics, and mesh convolutions.

NOTE: the tutorials are maintained carefully. However, they are not considered part of the API and they can change at any time without warning. It is not advised to write code that takes dependency on them.

Beginner

Object pose estimation Camera intrinsics optimization

Intermediate

B-spline and slerp interpolation Reflectance Non-rigid surface deformation

Advanced

Spherical harmonics rendering Environment map optimization Semantic mesh segmentation

TensorBoard 3D

Visual debugging is a great way to assess whether an experiment is going in the right direction. To this end, TensorFlow Graphics comes with a TensorBoard plugin to interactively visualize 3D meshes and point clouds. This demo shows how to use the plugin. Follow these instructions to install and configure TensorBoard 3D. Note that TensorBoard 3D is currently not compatible with eager execution nor TensorFlow 2.

Coming next...

Among many things, we are hoping to release resamplers, additional 3D convolution and pooling operators, and a differentiable rasterizer!

Follow us on Twitter to hear about the latest updates!

Additional Information

You may use this software under the Apache 2.0 License.

Community

As part of TensorFlow, we're committed to fostering an open and welcoming environment.

References

If you use TensorFlow Graphics in your research, please reference it as:

@inproceedings{TensorflowGraphicsIO2019,
   author = {Valentin, Julien and Keskin, Cem and Pidlypenskyi, Pavel and Makadia, Ameesh and Sud, Avneesh and Bouaziz, Sofien},
   title = {TensorFlow Graphics: Computer Graphics Meets Deep Learning},
   year = {2019}
}

Contact

Want to reach out? E-mail us at tf-graphics-contact@google.com!

Contributors - in alphabetical order

  • Sofien Bouaziz (sofien@google.com)
  • Jay Busch
  • Forrester Cole
  • Ambrus Csaszar
  • Boyang Deng
  • Ariel Gordon
  • Christian Häne
  • Cem Keskin
  • Ameesh Makadia
  • Cengiz Öztireli
  • Rohit Pandey
  • Romain Prévost
  • Pavel Pidlypenskyi
  • Stefan Popov
  • Konstantinos Rematas
  • Omar Sanseviero
  • Aviv Segal
  • Avneesh Sud
  • Andrea Tagliasacchi
  • Anastasia Tkach
  • Julien Valentin
  • He Wang
  • Yinda Zhang