Researcher profile

Shaolin Su

Shaolin Su contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

GLUT: 3D Gaussian Lookup Table for Continuous Color Transformation

3D Lookup Tables (3D LUTs) are widely used for color mapping, but their grid-based representation requires discretizing the RGB space, leading to a capacity-memory trade-off that becomes prohibitive when storing large numbers of LUTs. Recent approaches adopt implicit neural representations to improve scalability, yet their black-box nature limits interpretability and hinders intuitive, localized editing. In this paper, we propose Gaussian LUT (GLUT), a continuous and explicit color representation that models color transformations using a set of learnable 3D Gaussian primitives. By avoiding fixed-resolution grids, GLUT achieves flexible representational capacity while maintaining a compact memory footprint. Its explicit, spatially localized formulation further enables both accurate modeling and interpretability. Building on this representation, we introduce a compact conditional generator (CGLUT) that predicts GLUT parameters for multiple LUT instances, encoding diverse color styles in a single framework to enable smooth and controllable LUT style blending. Moreover, GLUT supports efficient, user-friendly editing by allowing localized adjustments to specific color regions without global retraining. Experimental results demonstrate that our approach outperforms prior neural LUT representations in both accuracy and efficiency, while offering improved interpretability and interactive control.

preprint2022arXiv

Exploring and Evaluating Image Restoration Potential in Dynamic Scenes

In dynamic scenes, images often suffer from dynamic blur due to superposition of motions or low signal-noise ratio resulted from quick shutter speed when avoiding motions. Recovering sharp and clean results from the captured images heavily depends on the ability of restoration methods and the quality of the input. Although existing research on image restoration focuses on developing models for obtaining better restored results, fewer have studied to evaluate how and which input image leads to superior restored quality. In this paper, to better study an image's potential value that can be explored for restoration, we propose a novel concept, referring to image restoration potential (IRP). Specifically, We first establish a dynamic scene imaging dataset containing composite distortions and applied image restoration processes to validate the rationality of the existence to IRP. Based on this dataset, we investigate several properties of IRP and propose a novel deep model to accurately predict IRP values. By gradually distilling and selective fusing the degradation features, the proposed model shows its superiority in IRP prediction. Thanks to the proposed model, we are then able to validate how various image restoration related applications are benefited from IRP prediction. We show the potential usages of IRP as a filtering principle to select valuable frames, an auxiliary guidance to improve restoration models, and even an indicator to optimize camera settings for capturing better images under dynamic scenarios.

preprint2021arXiv

Learning Depth via Leveraging Semantics: Self-supervised Monocular Depth Estimation with Both Implicit and Explicit Semantic Guidance

Self-supervised depth estimation has made a great success in learning depth from unlabeled image sequences. While the mappings between image and pixel-wise depth are well-studied in current methods, the correlation between image, depth and scene semantics, however, is less considered. This hinders the network to better understand the real geometry of the scene, since the contextual clues, contribute not only the latent representations of scene depth, but also the straight constraints for depth map. In this paper, we leverage the two benefits by proposing the implicit and explicit semantic guidance for accurate self-supervised depth estimation. We propose a Semantic-aware Spatial Feature Alignment (SSFA) scheme to effectively align implicit semantic features with depth features for scene-aware depth estimation. We also propose a semantic-guided ranking loss to explicitly constrain the estimated depth maps to be consistent with real scene contextual properties. Both semantic label noise and prediction uncertainty is considered to yield reliable depth supervisions. Extensive experimental results show that our method produces high quality depth maps which are consistently superior either on complex scenes or diverse semantic categories, and outperforms the state-of-the-art methods by a significant margin.