arXiv:2601.18993v2 Announce Type: replace-cross
Abstract: Camera redirection aims to replay a dynamic scene from a single monocular video under a user-specified camera trajectory. However, large-angle redirection is inherently ill-posed: a monocular video captures only a narrow spatio-temporal view of a dynamic 3D scene, providing severely limited observations of the underlying 4D world. The key challenge is therefore to recover a complete and coherent representation from this limited input, with consistent geometry and motion. While recent diffusion-based methods achieve impressive visual generation quality, they often break down under large-angle viewpoint changes far from the original trajectory, where missing visual grounding leads to severe geometric ambiguity and temporal inconsistency. We present FreeOrbit4D, an effective training-free framework that tackles this ambiguity by recovering a foreground-complete 4D proxy as structural grounding for video generation. We obtain this proxy by decoupling foreground and background reconstructions: we unproject the monocular video into a static background and partial foreground point clouds in a unified global space, then use an object-centric multi-view diffusion model to synthesize multi-view images and reconstruct complete foreground point clouds in canonical object space. By aligning the canonical foreground point cloud to the global scene space via dense pixel-synchronized 3D-3D correspondences and projecting the foreground-complete 4D proxy onto target camera viewpoints, we provide geometric scaffolds that guide a conditional video diffusion model. Extensive experiments show that FreeOrbit4D produces more faithful and temporally coherent redirected videos under challenging large-angle trajectories, and our proxy further enables applications such as edit propagation and 4D data generation. Project page: https://freeorbit4d.vision.ischool.illinois.edu/
Digital health tools and point solutions—pitfalls in population health program measurement
Digital health tools are generally poorly regulated and often lack strong research evidence, posing challenges for purchasers of point solutions such as employer groups and