Learning from 2D: Contrastive Pixel-to-Point Knowledge Transfer for 3D Pretraining

Most 3D neural networks are trained from scratch owing to the lack of large-scale labeled 3D datasets. In this paper, we present a novel 3D pretraining method by leveraging 2D networks learned from rich 2D datasets. We propose the contrastive pixel-to-point knowledge transfer to effectively utilize the 2D information by mapping the pixel-level and point-level features into the same embedding space. Due to the heterogeneous nature between 2D and 3D networks, we introduce the back-projection function to align the features between 2D and 3D to make the transfer possible. Additionally, we devise an upsampling feature projection layer to increase the spatial resolution of high-level 2D feature maps, which enables learning fine-grained 3D representations. With a pretrained 2D network, the proposed pretraining process requires no additional 2D or 3D labeled data, further alleviating the expensive 3D data annotation cost. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to exploit existing 2D trained weights to pretrain 3D deep neural networks. Our intensive experiments show that the 3D models pretrained with 2D knowledge boost the performances of 3D networks across various real-world 3D downstream tasks.

PDF Abstract
No code implementations yet. Submit your code now

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods


No methods listed for this paper. Add relevant methods here