GLASS: Graph and Vision-Language Assisted Semantic Shape Correspondence
Qinfeng Xiao, Guofeng Mei, Qilong Liu, Chenyuan Yi, Fabio Poiesi, Jian Zhang, Bo Yang, Yick Kit-lun
- Year
- 2026
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Establishing dense correspondence across 3D shapes is crucial for fundamental downstream tasks, including texture transfer, shape interpolation, and robotic manipulation. However, learning these mappings without manual supervision remains a formidable challenge, particularly under severe non-isometric deformations and in inter-class settings where geometric cues are ambiguous. Conventional functional map methods, while elegant, typically struggle in these regimes due to their reliance on isometry. To address this, we present GLASS, a framework that bridges the gap by integrating geometric spectral analysis with rich semantic priors from vision-language foundation models. GLASS introduces three key innovations: (i) a view-consistent strategy that enables robust multi-view visual feature extraction from powerful vision foundation models; (ii) the injection of language embeddings into vertex descriptors via zero-shot 3D segmentation, capturing high-level part semantics; and (iii) a graph-assisted contrastive loss that enforces structural consistency between regions (e.g., source's head'' $\leftrightarrow$ target's head'') by leveraging geodesic and topological relationships between regions. This design allows GLASS to learn globally coherent and semantically consistent maps without ground-truth supervision. Extensive experiments demonstrate that GLASS achieves state-of-the-art performance across all regimes, maintaining high accuracy on standard near-isometric tasks while significantly advancing performance in challenging settings. Specifically, it achieves average geodesic errors of 0.21, 4.5, and 5.6 on the inter-class benchmark SNIS and non-isometric benchmarks SMAL and TOPKIDS, reducing errors from URSSM baselines of 0.49, 6.0, and 8.9 by 57%, 25%, and 37%, respectively.
Keywords
Related papers
Real-Time Obstacle Avoidance for Manipulators and Mobile Robots
Oussama Khatib
1986
A Mathematical Introduction to Robotic Manipulation
Richard M. Murray, Zexiang Li, Shankar Sastry
2017
Robot dynamics and control
Mark W. Spong
1989
A tutorial on visual servo control
Seth Hutchinson, Gregory D. Hager, Peter Corke
1996