The rise of convolutional neural networks (CNNs) in the context of computer vision has occurred in tandem with the advancement of depth sensing technology. Depth cameras are capable of yielding two-dimensional arrays storing at each pixel the distance from objects and surfaces in a scene from a given sensor, aligned with a regular color image, obtaining so-called RGBD images. Inspired by prior models in the literature, this work develops a suite of RGBD CNN models to tackle the challenging tasks of object detection, instance segmentation, and semantic segmentation. Prominent architectures for object detection and image segmentation are modified to incorporate dual backbone approaches inputting RGB and depth images, combining features from both modalities through the use of novel fusion modules. For each task, the models developed are competitive with state-of-the-art RGBD architectures. In particular, the proposed RGBD object detection approach achieves 53.5% mAP₅₀ on the SUN RGBD 19-class object detection benchmark, while the proposed RGBD semantic segmentation architecture yields 69.4% accuracy with respect to the SUN RGBD 37-class semantic segmentation benchmark. An original 13-class RGBD instance segmentation benchmark is introduced for the SUN RGBD dataset, for which the proposed model achieves 38.4% mAP₅₀. Additionally, an original depth-aware panoptic segmentation model is developed, trained, and tested for new benchmarks conceived for the NYUDv2 and SUN RGBD datasets. These benchmarks offer researchers a baseline for the task of RGBD panoptic segmentation on these datasets, where the novel depth-aware model outperforms a comparable RGB counterpart.