Researcher profile

Siddharth Somasundaram

Siddharth Somasundaram contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Imaging Hidden Objects with Consumer LiDAR via Motion Induced Sampling

LiDARs are being increasingly deployed for consumer imaging in handheld, wearable, and robotic applications. These sensors can capture the time-of-flight of light at picosecond resolution, which in principle, enables them to capture information about objects hidden from their field of view. While such non-line-of-sight (NLOS) imaging capabilities have been shown on research-grade LiDARs, they are challenging to achieve on consumer devices due to poor signal quality resulting from low laser power, low spatial resolution, and object and camera motion. Inspired by burst photography and synthetic aperture radar, we propose a multi-frame fusion strategy to overcome these challenges and demonstrate NLOS imaging on consumer LiDAR. We first introduce the motion-induced aperture sampling model to unify the effects of object shape, object motion, and camera motion under a single measurement model. Using this model, we demonstrate several NLOS capabilities on a smartphone-grade LiDAR: (1) 3D reconstruction, (2) single and multi-object tracking, and (3) camera localization using hidden objects. Previously, NLOS imaging capabilities were largely restricted to bulky and expensive research-grade hardware that requires extensive setup and calibration. Our results represent a shift towards plug-and-play NLOS imaging, where anyone can image hidden objects with off-the-shelf hardware ($<100) and no additional setup. We believe that democratization of such capabilities will advance consumer applications of NLOS imaging.

preprint2023arXiv

Physics vs. Learned Priors: Rethinking Camera and Algorithm Design for Task-Specific Imaging

Cameras were originally designed using physics-based heuristics to capture aesthetic images. In recent years, there has been a transformation in camera design from being purely physics-driven to increasingly data-driven and task-specific. In this paper, we present a framework to understand the building blocks of this nascent field of end-to-end design of camera hardware and algorithms. As part of this framework, we show how methods that exploit both physics and data have become prevalent in imaging and computer vision, underscoring a key trend that will continue to dominate the future of task-specific camera design. Finally, we share current barriers to progress in end-to-end design, and hypothesize how these barriers can be overcome.