Scalable and Equivariant Spherical CNNs by Discrete-Continuous (DISCO) Convolutions

Abstract

No existing spherical convolutional neural network (CNN) framework is both computationally scalable and rotationally equivariant. Continuous approaches capture rotational equivariance but are often prohibitively computationally demanding. Discrete approaches offer more favorable computational performance but at the cost of equivariance. We develop a hybrid discrete-continuous (DISCO) group convolution that is simultaneously equivariant and computationally scalable to high-resolution. While our framework can be applied to any compact group, we specialize to the sphere. Our DISCO spherical convolutions not only exhibit SO(3) rotational equivariance but also a form of asymptotic SO(3)/SO(2) rotational equivariance, which is more desirable for many applications (where SO(n) is the special orthogonal group representing rotations in n-dimensions). Through a sparse tensor implementation we achieve linear scaling in number of pixels on the sphere for both computational cost and memory usage. For 4k spherical images we realize a saving of 109 in computational cost and 104 in memory usage when compared to the most efficient alternative equivariant spherical convolution. We apply the DISCO spherical CNN framework to a number of benchmark dense-prediction problems on the sphere, such as semantic segmentation and depth estimation, on all of which we achieve the state-of-the-art performance.

Publication
Matthew Price
Matthew Price
Research Fellow in Artificial Intelligence and Imaging

My research considers information; where it is, how it can be extracted, and how we can use it.

Related