21,119 research outputs found
Crowd Counting with Decomposed Uncertainty
Research in neural networks in the field of computer vision has achieved
remarkable accuracy for point estimation. However, the uncertainty in the
estimation is rarely addressed. Uncertainty quantification accompanied by point
estimation can lead to a more informed decision, and even improve the
prediction quality. In this work, we focus on uncertainty estimation in the
domain of crowd counting. With increasing occurrences of heavily crowded events
such as political rallies, protests, concerts, etc., automated crowd analysis
is becoming an increasingly crucial task. The stakes can be very high in many
of these real-world applications. We propose a scalable neural network
framework with quantification of decomposed uncertainty using a bootstrap
ensemble. We demonstrate that the proposed uncertainty quantification method
provides additional insight to the crowd counting problem and is simple to
implement. We also show that our proposed method exhibits the state of the art
performances in many benchmark crowd counting datasets.Comment: Accepted in AAAI 2020 (Main Technical Track
DecideNet: Counting Varying Density Crowds Through Attention Guided Detection and Density Estimation
In real-world crowd counting applications, the crowd densities vary greatly
in spatial and temporal domains. A detection based counting method will
estimate crowds accurately in low density scenes, while its reliability in
congested areas is downgraded. A regression based approach, on the other hand,
captures the general density information in crowded regions. Without knowing
the location of each person, it tends to overestimate the count in low density
areas. Thus, exclusively using either one of them is not sufficient to handle
all kinds of scenes with varying densities. To address this issue, a novel
end-to-end crowd counting framework, named DecideNet (DEteCtIon and Density
Estimation Network) is proposed. It can adaptively decide the appropriate
counting mode for different locations on the image based on its real density
conditions. DecideNet starts with estimating the crowd density by generating
detection and regression based density maps separately. To capture inevitable
variation in densities, it incorporates an attention module, meant to
adaptively assess the reliability of the two types of estimations. The final
crowd counts are obtained with the guidance of the attention module to adopt
suitable estimations from the two kinds of density maps. Experimental results
show that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance on three challenging
crowd counting datasets.Comment: CVPR 201
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