Researcher profile

Yakov Miron

Yakov Miron contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Hyp2Former: Hierarchy-Aware Hyperbolic Embeddings for Open-Set Panoptic Segmentation

Recognizing unknown objects is crucial for safety-critical applications such as autonomous driving and robotics. Open-Set Panoptic Segmentation (OPS) aims to segment known thing and stuff classes while identifying valid unknown objects as separate instances. Prior OPS approaches largely treat known categories as a flat label set, ignoring the semantic hierarchy that provides valuable structural priors for distinguishing unknown objects from in-distribution classes. In this work, we propose Hyp2Former, an end-to-end framework for OPS that does not require explicit modeling of unknowns during training, and instead learns hierarchical semantic similarities continuously in hyperbolic space. By explicitly encoding hierarchical relationships among known categories, the model learns a structured embedding space that captures multiple levels of semantic abstraction. As a result, unknown objects that cannot be confidently classified as known categories still remain in close proximity to higher-level concepts (e.g., an unknown animal remains closer to "animal" or "object" than to unrelated concepts such as "electronics" or "stuff") and can therefore be reliably detected, even if their fine-grained category was not represented during training. Empirical evaluations across multiple public datasets such as MS COCO, Cityscapes, and Lost&Found demonstrate that Hyp2Former outperforms existing methods on OPS, achieving the best balance between unknown object discovery and in-distribution robustness.

preprint2026arXiv

Leveraging Previous-Traversal Point Cloud Map Priors for Camera-Based 3D Object Detection and Tracking

Camera-based 3D object detection and tracking are central to autonomous driving, yet precise 3D object localization remains fundamentally constrained by depth ambiguity when no expensive, depth-rich online LiDAR is available at inference. In many deployments, however, vehicles repeatedly traverse the same environments, making static point cloud maps from prior traversals a practical source of geometric priors. We propose DualViewMapDet, a camera-only inference framework that retrieves such map priors online and leverages them to mitigate the absence of a LiDAR sensor during deployment. The key idea is a dual-space camera-map fusion strategy that avoids one-sided view conversion. Specifically, we (i) project the map into perspective view (PV) and encode multi-channel geometric cues to enrich image features and support BEV lifting, and (ii) encode the map directly in bird's-eye view (BEV) with a sparse voxel backbone and fuse it with lifted camera features in a shared metric space. Extensive evaluations on nuScenes and Argoverse 2 demonstrate consistent improvements over strong camera-only baselines, with particularly strong gains in object localization. Ablations further validate the contributions of PV/BEV fusion and prior-map coverage. We make the code and pre-trained models available at https://dualviewmapdet.cs.uni-freiburg.de .

preprint2022arXiv

DUQIM-Net: Probabilistic Object Hierarchy Representation for Multi-View Manipulation

Object manipulation in cluttered scenes is a difficult and important problem in robotics. To efficiently manipulate objects, it is crucial to understand their surroundings, especially in cases where multiple objects are stacked one on top of the other, preventing effective grasping. We here present DUQIM-Net, a decision-making approach for object manipulation in a setting of stacked objects. In DUQIM-Net, the hierarchical stacking relationship is assessed using Adj-Net, a model that leverages existing Transformer Encoder-Decoder object detectors by adding an adjacency head. The output of this head probabilistically infers the underlying hierarchical structure of the objects in the scene. We utilize the properties of the adjacency matrix in DUQIM-Net to perform decision making and assist with object-grasping tasks. Our experimental results show that Adj-Net surpasses the state-of-the-art in object-relationship inference on the Visual Manipulation Relationship Dataset (VMRD), and that DUQIM-Net outperforms comparable approaches in bin clearing tasks.

preprint2022arXiv

Towards Autonomous Grading In The Real World

In this work, we aim to tackle the problem of autonomous grading, where a dozer is required to flatten an uneven area. In addition, we explore methods for bridging the gap between a simulated environment and real scenarios. We design both a realistic physical simulation and a scaled real prototype environment mimicking the real dozer dynamics and sensory information. We establish heuristics and learning strategies in order to solve the problem. Through extensive experimentation, we show that although heuristics are capable of tackling the problem in a clean and noise-free simulated environment, they fail catastrophically when facing real world scenarios. As the heuristics are capable of successfully solving the task in the simulated environment, we show they can be leveraged to guide a learning agent which can generalize and solve the task both in simulation and in a scaled prototype environment.