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Apple’s AI model reconstructs 3D objects with realistic lighting from a single image
Apple researchers have developed an AI model that can rebuild detailed 3D objects from just one image, capturing complex lighting effects like reflections and highlights that change with viewing angles. This innovation a

Image: 9to5Mac
Apple researchers have developed an AI model that can rebuild detailed 3D objects from just one image, capturing complex lighting effects like reflections and highlights that change with viewing angles. This innovation addresses a major challenge in 3D reconstruction, where prior methods typically required multiple images or failed to produce realistic view-dependent lighting.
The breakthrough is grounded in Apple’s new system, LiTo (Surface Light Field Tokenization), which creates a latent 3D representation combining both object geometry and how light interacts with its surface. Unlike earlier techniques that focused mainly on shape or static textures, LiTo models surface light fields, allowing it to recreate specular highlights and Fresnel reflections even under complex lighting scenarios.
The LiTo model leverages latent space representations-a concept that translates visual data into compact numerical codes within a multi-dimensional framework. By encoding only a small subset of surface light information, LiTo efficiently condenses both shape and lighting into a single latent vector. This enables realistic rendering of objects from new perspectives, all from one initial photo.

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The training process involved thousands of objects, each rendered from 150 different angles and under various lighting conditions. However, instead of exposing the model to the full dataset at once, it was trained on randomized samples, forcing it to infer complete geometry and lighting from limited data. Afterwards, a separate component was trained to predict these latent codes from single images, bridging the gap from real-world photos to full 3D reconstructions.
LiTo’s ability to generate accurate 3D models with realistic lighting from just a single capture sets it apart from competing approaches such as TRELLIS, which struggle with natural reflections and highlights. Apple’s study includes interactive examples showcasing these differences, reinforcing this model’s potential for applications in augmented reality, digital content creation, and beyond.
By efficiently merging geometry and lighting data in latent space, this AI innovation could pioneer new ways to digitize objects quickly without complex multi-angle setups. It also hints at how future Apple devices might leverage on-device AI for sophisticated 3D scanning and rendering.
How the LiTo AI model reconstructs 3D objects from a single image
Benefits of Apple’s LiTo model in realistic lighting rendering
Applications of LiTo in augmented reality and digital content
AI Editor
Ava covers the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence, from foundational models and research labs to the real-world economics of intelligence. With a background in computational linguistics, she cuts through the hype to find out what actually works. She firmly believes that benchmarks are just marketing until reproduced in the wild.
via 9to5Mac


