New Google Patents · Filed Dec 22, 2025 · Published Jul 2, 2026 · verified — real USPTO data

Google Files Patent to Create Detailed 3D Human Models From Photographs

Google is patenting a way to automatically extract fine physical details from images of real people and feed those details into a second AI model that can generate accurate 3D representations of them.

Google Patent: Generating Detailed 3D Human Models — figure from US 2026/0187955 A1
FIG. 1A — rendered from the official USPTO publication PDF.
Publication number US 2026/0187955 A1
Applicant GOOGLE LLC
Filing date Dec 22, 2025
Publication date Jul 2, 2026
Inventors David Futschik, Menglei Chai, Delio Aleardo Vicini, Yinda Zhang
CPC classification 345/419
Grant likelihood Medium
Examiner CENTRAL, DOCKET (Art Unit OPAP)
Status Docketed New Case - Ready for Examination (Jan 21, 2026)
Parent application Claims priority from a provisional application 63739041 (filed 2024-12-26)
Document 20 claims

How Google's two-stage people-modeling system works

Imagine a company wants to let you virtually try on clothes, or a game wants to drop a realistic version of you into a scene. The hard part is capturing the small details that make a person look like that person: the shape of their shoulders, the way their face is proportioned, the subtle contours that a rough body scan would miss.

Google's patent describes a two-step approach. First, an AI model looks at a set of images of different people and figures out their physical characteristics. Then a second model uses those characteristics, along with the same images, to build a much more accurate 3D representation.

Think of it like a sculptor who first takes careful measurements before picking up any clay. The first pass gathers the data; the second pass uses it to get the details right. The result is a 3D model that reflects fine features rather than a generic body shape.

How the two models hand off physical traits

The patent describes a pipeline with two distinct AI models working in sequence.

Model one takes a set of features (things visible or measurable in images) and maps them to physical characteristics for a group of people. Think of this as a feature extractor: it learns the relationship between what a camera sees and what a person's body actually looks like in three dimensions.

Model two then takes the physical characteristics that model one produced, combines them with the original images, and generates a refined 3D representation. By conditioning (feeding inputs into) the second model on both the raw images and the extracted physical traits, the system can capture details that neither source alone would provide.

The key insight is the handoff: rather than trying to do everything in one pass, the system separates "measuring" from "building." This lets each model specialize, which generally produces better fine-detail results than a single end-to-end model trying to juggle both tasks at once.

What this means for avatars and virtual try-ons

Accurate 3D human models are a prerequisite for a wide range of products: virtual try-on in e-commerce, realistic avatars in video calls and games, fitness apps that track body shape over time, and augmented reality applications that need to place clothing or accessories on a real person's silhouette. The bottleneck has always been capturing fine features without expensive scanning hardware.

If this approach works at scale from ordinary photos, it could lower the barrier for generating personalized 3D representations significantly. Google has obvious deployment paths through Google Shopping, YouTube, and its broader AR and Maps platforms, though the patent itself does not name any specific product.

Editorial take

This is a solid technical filing in a genuinely competitive space. Apple, Meta, and several startups are all chasing accurate AI-generated human models, and a two-stage approach that separates feature extraction from model generation is a reasonable architectural bet. The abstract is unusually sparse, so the real novelty lives in the details not publicly visible yet.

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Source. Full patent text and figures from the official USPTO publication PDF.

Editorial commentary on a publicly published patent application. Not legal advice.