Regression-Based Camera Pose Estimation through Multi-Level Local Features and Global Features

Sensors (Basel). 2023 Apr 18;23(8):4063. doi: 10.3390/s23084063.

Abstract

Accurate and robust camera pose estimation is essential for high-level applications such as augmented reality and autonomous driving. Despite the development of global feature-based camera pose regression methods and local feature-based matching guided pose estimation methods, challenging conditions, such as illumination changes and viewpoint changes, as well as inaccurate keypoint localization, continue to affect the performance of camera pose estimation. In this paper, we propose a novel relative camera pose regression framework that uses global features with rotation consistency and local features with rotation invariance. First, we apply a multi-level deformable network to detect and describe local features, which can learn appearances and gradient information sensitive to rotation variants. Second, we process the detection and description processes using the results from pixel correspondences of the input image pairs. Finally, we propose a novel loss that combines relative regression loss and absolute regression loss, incorporating global features with geometric constraints to optimize the pose estimation model. Our extensive experiments report satisfactory accuracy on the 7Scenes dataset with an average mean translation error of 0.18 m and a rotation error of 7.44° using image pairs as input. Ablation studies were also conducted to verify the effectiveness of the proposed method in the tasks of pose estimation and image matching using the 7Scenes and HPatches datasets.

Keywords: deformable network; geometric constraint; global feature; image matching; local feature; pose estimation.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the China Scholarship Council (CSC) and Queen Mary University of London.