4.7 Article

Learning From Synthetic Images via Active Pseudo-Labeling

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING
Volume 29, Issue -, Pages 6452-6465

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TIP.2020.2989100

Keywords

Task analysis; Data models; Training; Visualization; Adaptation models; Neural networks; Predictive models; Deep learning; domain adaptation; style transfer; pseudo-labeling; semantic segmentation; object detection

Funding

  1. National Key R & D Program of China [2018YFA060550]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61822113, 61771349, 61876212]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [41300082]
  4. Science and Technology Major Project of Hubei Province (Next-Generation AI Technologies) [2019AEA170]
  5. Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province [2018CFA050]

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Synthetic visual data refers to the data automatically rendered by the mature computer graphic algorithms. With the rapid development of these techniques, we can now collect photo-realistic synthetic images with accurate pixel-level annotations without much effort. However, due to the domain gaps between synthetic data and real data, in terms of not only visual appearance but also label distribution, directly applying models trained on synthetic images to real ones can hardly yield satisfactory performance. Since the collection of accurate labels for real images is very laborious and time-consuming, developing algorithms which can learn from synthetic images is of great significance. In this paper, we propose a novel framework, namely Active Pseudo-Labeling (APL), to reduce the domain gaps between synthetic images and real images. In APL framework, we first predict pseudo-labels for the unlabeled real images in the target domain by actively adapting the style of the real images to source domain. Specifically, the style of real images is adjusted via a novel task guided generative model, and then pseudo-labels are predicted for these actively adapted images. Lastly, we fine-tune the source-trained model in the pseudo-labeled target domain, which helps to fit the distribution of the real data. Experiments on both semantic segmentation and object detection tasks with several challenging benchmark data sets demonstrate the priority of our proposed method compared to the existing state-of-the-art approaches.

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