8,266 research outputs found
Fusion of Multispectral Data Through Illumination-aware Deep Neural Networks for Pedestrian Detection
Multispectral pedestrian detection has received extensive attention in recent
years as a promising solution to facilitate robust human target detection for
around-the-clock applications (e.g. security surveillance and autonomous
driving). In this paper, we demonstrate illumination information encoded in
multispectral images can be utilized to significantly boost performance of
pedestrian detection. A novel illumination-aware weighting mechanism is present
to accurately depict illumination condition of a scene. Such illumination
information is incorporated into two-stream deep convolutional neural networks
to learn multispectral human-related features under different illumination
conditions (daytime and nighttime). Moreover, we utilized illumination
information together with multispectral data to generate more accurate semantic
segmentation which are used to boost pedestrian detection accuracy. Putting all
of the pieces together, we present a powerful framework for multispectral
pedestrian detection based on multi-task learning of illumination-aware
pedestrian detection and semantic segmentation. Our proposed method is trained
end-to-end using a well-designed multi-task loss function and outperforms
state-of-the-art approaches on KAIST multispectral pedestrian dataset
Object Detection in 20 Years: A Survey
Object detection, as of one the most fundamental and challenging problems in
computer vision, has received great attention in recent years. Its development
in the past two decades can be regarded as an epitome of computer vision
history. If we think of today's object detection as a technical aesthetics
under the power of deep learning, then turning back the clock 20 years we would
witness the wisdom of cold weapon era. This paper extensively reviews 400+
papers of object detection in the light of its technical evolution, spanning
over a quarter-century's time (from the 1990s to 2019). A number of topics have
been covered in this paper, including the milestone detectors in history,
detection datasets, metrics, fundamental building blocks of the detection
system, speed up techniques, and the recent state of the art detection methods.
This paper also reviews some important detection applications, such as
pedestrian detection, face detection, text detection, etc, and makes an in-deep
analysis of their challenges as well as technical improvements in recent years.Comment: This work has been submitted to the IEEE TPAMI for possible
publicatio
Taking a look at small-scale pedestrians and occluded pedestrians
Small-scale pedestrian detection and occluded pedestrian detection are two challenging tasks. However, most state-of-the-art methods merely handle one single task each time, thus giving rise to relatively poor performance when the two tasks, in practice, are required simultaneously. In this paper, it is found that small-scale pedestrian detection and occluded pedestrian detection actually have a common problem, i.e., an inaccurate location problem. Therefore, solving this problem enables to improve the performance of both tasks. To this end, we pay more attention to the predicted bounding box with worse location precision and extract more contextual information around objects, where two modules (i.e., location bootstrap and semantic transition) are proposed. The location bootstrap is used to reweight regression loss, where the loss of the predicted bounding box far from the corresponding ground-truth is upweighted and the loss of the predicted bounding box near the corresponding ground-truth is downweighted. Additionally, the semantic transition adds more contextual information and relieves semantic inconsistency of the skip-layer fusion. Since the location bootstrap is not used at the test stage and the semantic transition is lightweight, the proposed method does not add many extra computational costs during inference. Experiments on the challenging CityPersons and Caltech datasets show that the proposed method outperforms the state-of-the-art methods on the small-scale pedestrians and occluded pedestrians (e.g., 5.20% and 4.73% improvements on the Caltech)
Taking a Deeper Look at Pedestrians
In this paper we study the use of convolutional neural networks (convnets)
for the task of pedestrian detection. Despite their recent diverse successes,
convnets historically underperform compared to other pedestrian detectors. We
deliberately omit explicitly modelling the problem into the network (e.g. parts
or occlusion modelling) and show that we can reach competitive performance
without bells and whistles. In a wide range of experiments we analyse small and
big convnets, their architectural choices, parameters, and the influence of
different training data, including pre-training on surrogate tasks.
We present the best convnet detectors on the Caltech and KITTI dataset. On
Caltech our convnets reach top performance both for the Caltech1x and
Caltech10x training setup. Using additional data at training time our strongest
convnet model is competitive even to detectors that use additional data
(optical flow) at test time
Multispectral Deep Neural Networks for Pedestrian Detection
Multispectral pedestrian detection is essential for around-the-clock
applications, e.g., surveillance and autonomous driving. We deeply analyze
Faster R-CNN for multispectral pedestrian detection task and then model it into
a convolutional network (ConvNet) fusion problem. Further, we discover that
ConvNet-based pedestrian detectors trained by color or thermal images
separately provide complementary information in discriminating human instances.
Thus there is a large potential to improve pedestrian detection by using color
and thermal images in DNNs simultaneously. We carefully design four ConvNet
fusion architectures that integrate two-branch ConvNets on different DNNs
stages, all of which yield better performance compared with the baseline
detector. Our experimental results on KAIST pedestrian benchmark show that the
Halfway Fusion model that performs fusion on the middle-level convolutional
features outperforms the baseline method by 11% and yields a missing rate 3.5%
lower than the other proposed architectures.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, BMVC 2016 ora
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