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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

DeepLab: Semantic Image Segmentation with Deep Convolutional Nets, Atrous Convolution, and Fully Connected CRFs

TLDR
This work addresses the task of semantic image segmentation with Deep Learning and proposes atrous spatial pyramid pooling (ASPP), which is proposed to robustly segment objects at multiple scales, and improves the localization of object boundaries by combining methods from DCNNs and probabilistic graphical models.
Abstract
In this work we address the task of semantic image segmentation with Deep Learning and make three main contributions that are experimentally shown to have substantial practical merit. First , we highlight convolution with upsampled filters, or ‘atrous convolution’, as a powerful tool in dense prediction tasks. Atrous convolution allows us to explicitly control the resolution at which feature responses are computed within Deep Convolutional Neural Networks. It also allows us to effectively enlarge the field of view of filters to incorporate larger context without increasing the number of parameters or the amount of computation. Second , we propose atrous spatial pyramid pooling (ASPP) to robustly segment objects at multiple scales. ASPP probes an incoming convolutional feature layer with filters at multiple sampling rates and effective fields-of-views, thus capturing objects as well as image context at multiple scales. Third , we improve the localization of object boundaries by combining methods from DCNNs and probabilistic graphical models. The commonly deployed combination of max-pooling and downsampling in DCNNs achieves invariance but has a toll on localization accuracy. We overcome this by combining the responses at the final DCNN layer with a fully connected Conditional Random Field (CRF), which is shown both qualitatively and quantitatively to improve localization performance. Our proposed “DeepLab” system sets the new state-of-art at the PASCAL VOC-2012 semantic image segmentation task, reaching 79.7 percent mIOU in the test set, and advances the results on three other datasets: PASCAL-Context, PASCAL-Person-Part, and Cityscapes. All of our code is made publicly available online.

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Posted Content

Learning Visual Representations with Caption Annotations

TL;DR: It is argued that captioned images are easily crawlable and can be exploited to supervise the training of visual representations, and proposed hybrid models, with dedicated visual and textual encoders, show that the visual representations learned as a by-product of solving this task transfer well to a variety of target tasks.
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SaliencyMix: A Saliency Guided Data Augmentation Strategy for Better Regularization

TL;DR: This work proposes SaliencyMix, a new state-of-the-art top-1 error-reducing model that carefully selects a representative image patch with the help of a saliency map and mixes this indicative patch with a target image that leads the model to learn more appropriate feature representation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Salient object detection via multi-scale attention CNN

TL;DR: A novel deep convolutional neural network is proposed by introducing a spatial and channel-wise attention layer into a multi-scale encoder-decoder framework and a structure with multiple scale side-way outputs was designed to produce more accurate edge-preserving saliency maps.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Weakly Supervised Affordance Detection

TL;DR: This work introduces a pixel-wise annotated affordance dataset of 3090 images containing 9916 object instances and proposes an approach to train the network from very few keypoint annotations to achieve a higher affordance detection accuracy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Image super-resolution using a dilated convolutional neural network

TL;DR: A 7-layer dilated convolutional neural network (DCNN) with skip-connections is proposed to recover the high- resolution image from the interpolated low-resolution image and a cascade model is designed to address the different magnification factors problems.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Deep Residual Learning for Image Recognition

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a residual learning framework to ease the training of networks that are substantially deeper than those used previously, which won the 1st place on the ILSVRC 2015 classification task.
Proceedings Article

ImageNet Classification with Deep Convolutional Neural Networks

TL;DR: The state-of-the-art performance of CNNs was achieved by Deep Convolutional Neural Networks (DCNNs) as discussed by the authors, which consists of five convolutional layers, some of which are followed by max-pooling layers, and three fully-connected layers with a final 1000-way softmax.
Proceedings Article

Very Deep Convolutional Networks for Large-Scale Image Recognition

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effect of the convolutional network depth on its accuracy in the large-scale image recognition setting and showed that a significant improvement on the prior-art configurations can be achieved by pushing the depth to 16-19 layers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gradient-based learning applied to document recognition

TL;DR: In this article, a graph transformer network (GTN) is proposed for handwritten character recognition, which can be used to synthesize a complex decision surface that can classify high-dimensional patterns, such as handwritten characters.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Going deeper with convolutions

TL;DR: Inception as mentioned in this paper is a deep convolutional neural network architecture that achieves the new state of the art for classification and detection in the ImageNet Large-Scale Visual Recognition Challenge 2014 (ILSVRC14).