JOURNAL ARTICLE

Single Image Depth Estimation Trained via Depth From Defocus Cues

Abstract

Estimating depth from a single RGB images is a fundamental task in computer vision, which is most directly solved using supervised deep learning. In the field of unsupervised learning of depth from a single RGB image, depth is not given explicitly. Existing work in the field receives either a stereo pair, a monocular video, or multiple views, and, using losses that are based on structure-from-motion, trains a depth estimation network. In this work, we rely, instead of different views, on depth from focus cues. Learning is based on a novel Point Spread Function convolutional layer, which applies location specific kernels that arise from the Circle-Of-Confusion in each image location. We evaluate our method on data derived from five common datasets for depth estimation and lightfield images, and present results that are on par with supervised methods on KITTI and Make3D datasets and outperform unsupervised learning approaches. Since the phenomenon of depth from defocus is not dataset specific, we hypothesize that learning based on it would overfit less to the specific content in each dataset. Our experiments show that this is indeed the case, and an estimator learned on one dataset using our method provides better results on other datasets, than the directly supervised methods.

Keywords:
Artificial intelligence Computer science Overfitting Focus (optics) Depth map Computer vision Monocular Supervised learning Estimator Depth perception RGB color model Unsupervised learning Deep learning Pattern recognition (psychology) Image (mathematics) Artificial neural network Mathematics

Metrics

133
Cited By
15.38
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
60
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Image Processing Techniques and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Media Technology
Advanced Vision and Imaging
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Optical Coherence Tomography Applications
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.