CVDec 17, 2017

Spatial As Deep: Spatial CNN for Traffic Scene Understanding

arXiv:1712.06080v21194 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of detecting structured objects in traffic scenes for autonomous driving systems, representing a domain-specific advancement.

The paper tackles the problem of traffic scene understanding by proposing Spatial CNN (SCNN) to capture spatial relationships in images, particularly for objects like traffic lanes with weak appearance cues. The results show SCNN improves lane detection performance by 8.7% over RNN-based methods and achieves 96.53% accuracy on a benchmark challenge.

Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) are usually built by stacking convolutional operations layer-by-layer. Although CNN has shown strong capability to extract semantics from raw pixels, its capacity to capture spatial relationships of pixels across rows and columns of an image is not fully explored. These relationships are important to learn semantic objects with strong shape priors but weak appearance coherences, such as traffic lanes, which are often occluded or not even painted on the road surface as shown in Fig. 1 (a). In this paper, we propose Spatial CNN (SCNN), which generalizes traditional deep layer-by-layer convolutions to slice-byslice convolutions within feature maps, thus enabling message passings between pixels across rows and columns in a layer. Such SCNN is particular suitable for long continuous shape structure or large objects, with strong spatial relationship but less appearance clues, such as traffic lanes, poles, and wall. We apply SCNN on a newly released very challenging traffic lane detection dataset and Cityscapse dataset. The results show that SCNN could learn the spatial relationship for structure output and significantly improves the performance. We show that SCNN outperforms the recurrent neural network (RNN) based ReNet and MRF+CNN (MRFNet) in the lane detection dataset by 8.7% and 4.6% respectively. Moreover, our SCNN won the 1st place on the TuSimple Benchmark Lane Detection Challenge, with an accuracy of 96.53%.

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