Loading web-font TeX/Math/Italic
GRNet:Geometry Restoration for G-PCC Compressed Point Clouds Using Auxiliary Density Signaling | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

GRNet:Geometry Restoration for G-PCC Compressed Point Clouds Using Auxiliary Density Signaling


Abstract:

The lossy Geometry-based Point Cloud Compression (G-PCC) inevitably impairs the geometry information of point clouds, which deteriorates the quality of experience (QoE) i...Show More

Abstract:

The lossy Geometry-based Point Cloud Compression (G-PCC) inevitably impairs the geometry information of point clouds, which deteriorates the quality of experience (QoE) in reconstruction and/or misleads decisions in tasks such as classification. To tackle it, this work proposes GRNet for the geometry restoration of G-PCC compressed large-scale point clouds. By analyzing the content characteristics of original and G-PCC compressed point clouds, we attribute the G-PCC distortion to two key factors: point vanishing and point displacement. Visible impairments on a point cloud are usually dominated by an individual factor or superimposed by both factors, which are determined by the density of the original point cloud. To this end, we employ two different models for coordinate reconstruction, termed Coordinate Expansion and Coordinate Refinement, to attack the point vanishing and displacement, respectively. In addition, 4-byte auxiliary density information is signaled in the bitstream to assist the selection of Coordinate Expansion, Coordinate Refinement, or their combination. Before being fed into the coordinate reconstruction module, the G-PCC compressed point cloud is first processed by a Feature Analysis Module for multiscale information fusion, in which kNN-based Transformer is leveraged at each scale to adaptively characterize neighborhood geometric dynamics for effective restoration. Following the common test conditions recommended in the MPEG standardization committee, GRNet significantly improves the G-PCC anchor and remarkably outperforms state-of-the-art methods on a great variety of point clouds (e.g., solid, dense, and sparse samples) both quantitatively and qualitatively. Meanwhile, GRNet runs fairly fast and uses a smaller-size model when compared with existing learning-based approaches, making it attractive to industry practitioners.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics ( Volume: 30, Issue: 10, October 2024)
Page(s): 6740 - 6753
Date of Publication: 27 November 2023

ISSN Information:

PubMed ID: 38010929

Funding Agency:


Contact IEEE to Subscribe

References

References is not available for this document.