3.8 Proceedings Paper

Decoupled Dynamic Filter Networks

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/CVPR46437.2021.00658

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61976094]
  2. NSF [1149783]

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The study introduces the Decoupled Dynamic Filter (DDF) to address the two main shortcomings of standard convolution, achieving performance improvement by decomposing the dynamic filter, limiting parameter numbers and computational costs, and replacing standard convolution with DDF in classification networks.
Convolution is one of the basic building blocks of CNN architectures. Despite its common use, standard convolution has two main shortcomings: Content-agnostic and Computation-heavy. Dynamic filters are content-adaptive, while further increasing the computational overhead. Depth-wise convolution is a lightweight variant, but it usually leads to a drop in CNN performance or requires a larger number of channels. In this work, we propose the Decoupled Dynamic Filter (DDF) that can simultaneously tackle both of these shortcomings. Inspired by recent advances in attention, DDF decouples a depth-wise dynamic filter into spatial and channel dynamic filters. This decomposition considerably reduces the number of parameters and limits computational costs to the same level as depthwise convolution. Meanwhile, we observe a significant boost in performance when replacing standard convolution with DDF in classification networks. ResNet50 / 101 get improved by 1.9% and 1.3% on the top-I accuracy, while their computational costs are reduced by nearly half. Experiments on the detection and joint upsampling networks also demonstrate the superior performance of the DDF upsampling variant (DDF-Up) in comparison with standard convolution and specialized content-adaptive layers. The project page with code is available(1).

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