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Collaborating Authors

 Gupta, Kumaraditya


OpenLex3D: A New Evaluation Benchmark for Open-Vocabulary 3D Scene Representations

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

3D scene understanding has been transformed by open-vocabulary language models that enable interaction via natural language. However, the evaluation of these representations is limited to closed-set semantics that do not capture the richness of language. This work presents OpenLex3D, a dedicated benchmark to evaluate 3D open-vocabulary scene representations. OpenLex3D provides entirely new label annotations for 23 scenes from Replica, ScanNet++, and HM3D, which capture real-world linguistic variability by introducing synonymical object categories and additional nuanced descriptions. By introducing an open-set 3D semantic segmentation task and an object retrieval task, we provide insights on feature precision, segmentation, and downstream capabilities. We evaluate various existing 3D open-vocabulary methods on OpenLex3D, showcasing failure cases, and avenues for improvement. The benchmark is publicly available at: https://openlex3d.github.io/.


Open-Set 3D Semantic Instance Maps for Vision Language Navigation -- O3D-SIM

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Humans excel at forming mental maps of their surroundings, equipping them to understand object relationships and navigate based on language queries. Our previous work SI Maps [1] showed that having instance-level information and the semantic understanding of an environment helps significantly improve performance for language-guided tasks. We extend this instance-level approach to 3D while increasing the pipeline's robustness and improving quantitative and qualitative results. Our method leverages foundational models for object recognition, image segmentation, and feature extraction. We propose a representation that results in a 3D point cloud map with instance-level embeddings, which bring in the semantic understanding that natural language commands can query. Quantitatively, the work improves upon the success rate of language-guided tasks. At the same time, we qualitatively observe the ability to identify instances more clearly and leverage the foundational models and language and image-aligned embeddings to identify objects that, otherwise, a closed-set approach wouldn't be able to identify.


QueSTMaps: Queryable Semantic Topological Maps for 3D Scene Understanding

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Understanding the structural organisation of 3D indoor scenes in terms of rooms is often accomplished via floorplan extraction. Robotic tasks such as planning and navigation require a semantic understanding of the scene as well. This is typically achieved via object-level semantic segmentation. However, such methods struggle to segment out topological regions like "kitchen" in the scene. In this work, we introduce a two-step pipeline. First, we extract a topological map, i.e., floorplan of the indoor scene using a novel multi-channel occupancy representation. Then, we generate CLIP-aligned features and semantic labels for every room instance based on the objects it contains using a self-attention transformer. Our language-topology alignment supports natural language querying, e.g., a "place to cook" locates the "kitchen". We outperform the current state-of-the-art on room segmentation by ~20% and room classification by ~12%. Our detailed qualitative analysis and ablation studies provide insights into the problem of joint structural and semantic 3D scene understanding.