Depth completion involves estimating a dense depth image from sparse depth measurements, often guided by a color image. While linear upsampling is straight forward, it results in artifacts including depth pixels being interpolated in empty space across discontinuities between objects. Current methods use deep networks to upsample and "complete" the missing depth pixels. Nevertheless, depth smearing between objects remains a challenge. We propose a new representation for depth called Depth Coefficients (DC) to address this problem. It enables convolutions to more easily avoid inter-object depth mixing. We also show that the standard Mean Squared Error (MSE) loss function can promote depth mixing, and thus propose instead to use cross-entropy loss for DC. With quantitative and qualitative evaluation on benchmarks, we show that switching out sparse depth input and MSE loss with our DC representation and crossentropy loss is a simple way to improve depth completion performance, and reduce pixel depth mixing, which leads to improved depth-based object detection.
Chloroplast division mutants with enlarged chloroplasts or heterogeneous chloroplast populations differ markedly from the wild type in their photorelocation efficiency and/or photosynthetic capacity under high or fluctuating light intensities.
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