pytorch-spynet

This is a personal reimplementation of SPyNet [1] using PyTorch. Should you be making use of this work, please cite the paper accordingly. Also, make sure to adhere to the licensing terms of the authors. Should you be making use of this particular implementation, please acknowledge it appropriately [2].

687474703a2f2f7777772e61727869762d73616e6974792e636f6d2f7374617469632f7468756d62732f313631312e303038353076312e7064662e6a7067

usage

To run it on your own pair of images, use the following command. You can choose between various models, please make sure to see their paper / the code for more details.

python run.py --model sintel-final --first ./images/first.png --second ./images/second.png --out ./out.flo

I am afraid that I cannot guarantee that this reimplementation is correct. However, it produced results identical to the implementation of the original authors in the examples that I tried. Please feel free to contribute to this repository by submitting issues and pull requests.

comparison

comparison--2-

license

As stated in the licensing terms of the authors of the paper, the models are free for non-commercial and scientific research purpose. Please make sure to further consult their licensing terms.

references

[1]  @inproceedings{Ranjan_CVPR_2017,
         author = {Ranjan, Anurag and Black, Michael J.},
         title = {Optical Flow Estimation Using a Spatial Pyramid Network},
         booktitle = {IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition},
         year = {2017}
     }
[2]  @misc{pytorch-spynet,
         author = {Simon Niklaus},
         title = {A Reimplementation of {SPyNet} Using {PyTorch}},
         year = {2018},
         howpublished = {\url{https://github.com/sniklaus/pytorch-spynet}}
    }

GitHub

https://github.com/sniklaus/pytorch-spynet