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Generalised Implicit Neural Representations

Neural Information Processing Systems

We consider the problem of learning implicit neural representations (INRs) for signals on non-Euclidean domains. In the Euclidean case, INRs are trained on a discrete sampling of a signal over a regular lattice. Here, we assume that the continuous signal exists on some unknown topological space from which we sample a discrete graph.In the absence of a coordinate system to identify the sampled nodes, we propose approximating their location with a spectral embedding of the graph. This allows us to train INRs without knowing the underlying continuous domain, which is the case for most graph signals in nature, while also making the INRs independent of any choice of coordinate system. We show experiments with our method on various real-world signals on non-Euclidean domains.


Supplementary material for " Generalised Implicit Neural Representations "

Neural Information Processing Systems

One interesting application of INRs is to train them using the derivatives of the target signal as supervision. This idea, which was introduced by Sitzmann et al. We report in Figure 1 the original texture, its Laplacian, and the reconstructed signal, as predicted by the INR. In the second experiment of Section 4.1, we train the models using the default setting.


Generalised Implicit Neural Representations

Neural Information Processing Systems

We consider the problem of learning implicit neural representations (INRs) for signals on non-Euclidean domains. In the Euclidean case, INRs are trained on a discrete sampling of a signal over a regular lattice. Here, we assume that the continuous signal exists on some unknown topological space from which we sample a discrete graph.In the absence of a coordinate system to identify the sampled nodes, we propose approximating their location with a spectral embedding of the graph. This allows us to train INRs without knowing the underlying continuous domain, which is the case for most graph signals in nature, while also making the INRs independent of any choice of coordinate system. We show experiments with our method on various real-world signals on non-Euclidean domains.