Scene and Human in One World: Reconstruction in a Feedforward Pass

Abstract

Reconstructing humans in dynamic scenes from moving monocular cameras remains challenging due to scale ambiguity, human-scene misalignment, and occlusion interference. Rather than treating human mesh recovery and scene reconstruction as separate tasks, we believe that accurate human-scene reconstruction requires the two tasks to mutually inform each other: parametric human models offer semantic structure and metric-scale priors, while scene geometry provides spatial context for human localization and alignment. Built on this insight, we introduce SHOW, a mask-promptable human mesh recovery framework that couples feed-forward 3D scene reconstruction with Human Mesh Recovery in a unified metric space. SHOW injects human semantics and scale priors from parametric human models into normalized point-map prediction, enabling metric-scale scene reconstruction from inherently scale-ambiguous monocular input. In turn, the recovered scene geometry constrains human mesh estimation, encouraging spatially consistent human placement and improved human-scene alignment. To handle complex multi-person and cluttered scenes, SHOW further incorporates a promptable masking mechanism that enables flexible target-human selection while suppressing background distractions and occlusion interference. Through joint training, the model learns both human-aware geometric features and geometry-constrained human features, producing aligned metric-scale reconstructions from monocular human-centric videos. Extensive experiments demonstrate that SHOW improves metric-scale consistency, human-scene alignment, and reconstruction accuracy under challenging camera motion, occlusion, and cluttered backgrounds.

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