University of Virginia
Your course project provides an opportunity for you to explore an interesting problem in area of 3D computer vision. Any topics in 3D vision, such as multiview 3D reconstruction, camera pose estimation, the interection of natual language processing and 3D vision, the applications of 3D vision in other domains (e.g. robotics, ecology), 3D recognition from images or point clouds, are all acceptable. A comprehensive topics in 3D vision can be found here. Your project will be worth 50% of your final class grade, and will have four deliverables:
All write-ups should use the CVPR style.
You are responsible for forming project teams of two or three people. In some cases, we will also accept smaller or larger teams, but a 2-3 person group is preferred. If you have trouble forming a group, please send us an email and we will help you find project partners.
As a broad target, the final project should involve approximately as much work as a homework assignment in a typical graduate-level course for each student in the group. Thus the total work should scale roughly linearly with the group size, and be distributed roughly equally. An ambitious, well-done project from a group of two should be on the order of a conference paper in depth of experimentation.
You must turn in a brief project proposal that provides an overview of your idea and also contains a brief survey of related work on the topic. We will provide a list of suggested project ideas for you to choose from. However, you're very encouraged to find project ideas that you are excited about. A great starter is the papers we will discuss in our courses. We will provide feedbacks based on your project proposals and presentation.
Proposals should be approximately two pages long, and should include the following information:
The grading breakdown for the proposal is as follows:
The project proposal will be due at 11:59 PM on Monday, October 14, and must be submitted via Gradescope.
Your final report is expected to be 8 pages excluding references, in accordance with the length requirements for a CVPR paper. It should have roughly the following format:
The grading breakdown for the final report is as follows:
The project final report will be due at 11:59 PM on Monday, December 17, and must be submitted via Gradescope.
Note that late days do not apply to the final report.
Presentation skill is critical in your career. A good presentation should convey your project to the target audience clearly and efficiently. Our course provides many great opportunies for you to practice, such as paper presentation, project proposal presentation, and final project presentation.
You are encouraged to propose your own topics. Below are some general suggestions and constraints:
Some vision projects may involve large scale data and require GPU computing resources. We recommend you to check out “AWS Education” and “Google Cloud Platform”.