Alexandru Drimbarean

CV
4papers
17citations
Novelty64%
AI Score29

4 Papers

CVNov 27, 2023
Video Anomaly Detection via Spatio-Temporal Pseudo-Anomaly Generation : A Unified Approach

Ayush K. Rai, Tarun Krishna, Feiyan Hu et al.

Video Anomaly Detection (VAD) is an open-set recognition task, which is usually formulated as a one-class classification (OCC) problem, where training data is comprised of videos with normal instances while test data contains both normal and anomalous instances. Recent works have investigated the creation of pseudo-anomalies (PAs) using only the normal data and making strong assumptions about real-world anomalies with regards to abnormality of objects and speed of motion to inject prior information about anomalies in an autoencoder (AE) based reconstruction model during training. This work proposes a novel method for generating generic spatio-temporal PAs by inpainting a masked out region of an image using a pre-trained Latent Diffusion Model and further perturbing the optical flow using mixup to emulate spatio-temporal distortions in the data. In addition, we present a simple unified framework to detect real-world anomalies under the OCC setting by learning three types of anomaly indicators, namely reconstruction quality, temporal irregularity and semantic inconsistency. Extensive experiments on four VAD benchmark datasets namely Ped2, Avenue, ShanghaiTech and UBnormal demonstrate that our method performs on par with other existing state-of-the-art PAs generation and reconstruction based methods under the OCC setting. Our analysis also examines the transferability and generalisation of PAs across these datasets, offering valuable insights by identifying real-world anomalies through PAs.

LGJan 22, 2023
Unifying Synergies between Self-supervised Learning and Dynamic Computation

Tarun Krishna, Ayush K Rai, Alexandru Drimbarean et al.

Computationally expensive training strategies make self-supervised learning (SSL) impractical for resource constrained industrial settings. Techniques like knowledge distillation (KD), dynamic computation (DC), and pruning are often used to obtain a lightweightmodel, which usually involves multiple epochs of fine-tuning (or distilling steps) of a large pre-trained model, making it more computationally challenging. In this work we present a novel perspective on the interplay between SSL and DC paradigms. In particular, we show that it is feasible to simultaneously learn a dense and gated sub-network from scratch in a SSL setting without any additional fine-tuning or pruning steps. The co-evolution during pre-training of both dense and gated encoder offers a good accuracy-efficiency trade-off and therefore yields a generic and multi-purpose architecture for application specific industrial settings. Extensive experiments on several image classification benchmarks including CIFAR-10/100, STL-10 and ImageNet-100, demonstrate that the proposed training strategy provides a dense and corresponding gated sub-network that achieves on-par performance compared with the vanilla self-supervised setting, but at a significant reduction in computation in terms of FLOPs, under a range of target budgets (td ).

CVAug 1, 2024
Reclaiming Residual Knowledge: A Novel Paradigm to Low-Bit Quantization

Róisín Luo, Alexandru Drimbarean, James McDermott et al.

This paper explores a novel paradigm in low-bit (i.e. 4-bits or lower) quantization, differing from existing state-of-the-art methods, by framing optimal quantization as an architecture search problem within convolutional neural networks (ConvNets). Our framework, dubbed \textbf{CoRa} (Optimal Quantization Residual \textbf{Co}nvolutional Operator Low-\textbf{Ra}nk Adaptation), is motivated by two key aspects. Firstly, quantization residual knowledge, i.e. the lost information between floating-point weights and quantized weights, has long been neglected by the research community. Reclaiming the critical residual knowledge, with an infinitesimal extra parameter cost, can reverse performance degradation without training. Secondly, state-of-the-art quantization frameworks search for optimal quantized weights to address the performance degradation. Yet, the vast search spaces in weight optimization pose a challenge for the efficient optimization in large models. For example, state-of-the-art BRECQ necessitates $2 \times 10^4$ iterations to quantize models. Fundamentally differing from existing methods, \textbf{CoRa} searches for the optimal architectures of low-rank adapters, reclaiming critical quantization residual knowledge, within the search spaces smaller compared to the weight spaces, by many orders of magnitude. The low-rank adapters approximate the quantization residual weights, discarded in previous methods. We evaluate our approach over multiple pre-trained ConvNets on ImageNet. \textbf{CoRa} achieves comparable performance against both state-of-the-art quantization-aware training and post-training quantization baselines, in $4$-bit and $3$-bit quantization, by using less than $250$ iterations on a small calibration set with $1600$ images. Thus, \textbf{CoRa} establishes a new state-of-the-art in terms of the optimization efficiency in low-bit quantization.

CVJun 28, 2018
Efficient CNN Implementation for Eye-Gaze Estimation on Low-Power/Low-Quality Consumer Imaging Systems

Joseph Lemley, Anuradha Kar, Alexandru Drimbarean et al.

Accurate and efficient eye gaze estimation is important for emerging consumer electronic systems such as driver monitoring systems and novel user interfaces. Such systems are required to operate reliably in difficult, unconstrained environments with low power consumption and at minimal cost. In this paper a new hardware friendly, convolutional neural network model with minimal computational requirements is introduced and assessed for efficient appearance-based gaze estimation. The model is tested and compared against existing appearance based CNN approaches, achieving better eye gaze accuracy with significantly fewer computational requirements. A brief updated literature review is also provided.