Salīdzināt metodes
Apskatiet izvēlētās metodes blakus; rindas, kas atšķiras, ir izceltas.
| Neural Radiance Fields (NeRF)× | DETR (Detection Transformer)× | |
|---|---|---|
| Nozare | Dziļā mācīšanās | Dziļā mācīšanās |
| Saime | Machine learning | Machine learning |
| Izcelsmes gads | 2020 | 2020 |
| Autors≠ | Ben Mildenhall | Nicolas Carion |
| Tips | Neural network architecture | Neural network architecture |
| Pirmavots≠ | Mildenhall, B., Srinivasan, P. P., Tancik, M., Barron, J. T., Ramamoorthi, R., & Ng, R. (2020). NeRF: Representing scenes as neural radiance fields for view synthesis. In Computer Vision-ECCV 2020: 16th European Conference (pp. 405-421). Springer International Publishing. DOI ↗ | Carion, N., Massa, F., Synnaeve, G., Usunier, N., Kirillov, A., & Zagoruyko, S. (2020). End-to-end object detection with transformers. In European Conference on Computer Vision (pp. 213-229). Springer, Cham. DOI ↗ |
| Citi nosaukumi | NeRF, Neural radiance field | Detection Transformer, DETR |
| Saistītās | 4 | 4 |
| Kopsavilkums≠ | Neural Radiance Fields (NeRF) is a method introduced by Mildenhall et al. in 2020 that represents a 3D scene as a continuous function parameterized by a neural network. Given multi-view images of a scene, NeRF learns to predict the color and density of light rays at any spatial location and viewing angle, enabling novel view synthesis with photorealistic quality. | DETR (Detection Transformer) is an end-to-end framework for object detection introduced by Carion et al. in 2020 that reformulates detection as a direct set prediction problem using transformers. Unlike traditional approaches that use hand-crafted post-processing like non-maximum suppression, DETR treats object detection as a sequence-to-sequence problem where the transformer predicts all objects at once. |
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