Progress and limitations of deep networks to recognize objects in unusual poses
This addresses robustness issues for deploying deep networks in high-stakes applications like self-driving cars, but it is incremental as it measures existing limitations without proposing new solutions.
The study evaluated deep networks' ability to recognize objects in unusual poses, finding an average accuracy drop of 29.5% compared to upright objects, with the best network (Noisy Student EfficientNet-L2) showing a 14.5% drop but still lagging behind human robustness.
Deep networks should be robust to rare events if they are to be successfully deployed in high-stakes real-world applications (e.g., self-driving cars). Here we study the capability of deep networks to recognize objects in unusual poses. We create a synthetic dataset of images of objects in unusual orientations, and evaluate the robustness of a collection of 38 recent and competitive deep networks for image classification. We show that classifying these images is still a challenge for all networks tested, with an average accuracy drop of 29.5% compared to when the objects are presented upright. This brittleness is largely unaffected by various network design choices, such as training losses (e.g., supervised vs. self-supervised), architectures (e.g., convolutional networks vs. transformers), dataset modalities (e.g., images vs. image-text pairs), and data-augmentation schemes. However, networks trained on very large datasets substantially outperform others, with the best network tested$\unicode{x2014}$Noisy Student EfficentNet-L2 trained on JFT-300M$\unicode{x2014}$showing a relatively small accuracy drop of only 14.5% on unusual poses. Nevertheless, a visual inspection of the failures of Noisy Student reveals a remaining gap in robustness with the human visual system. Furthermore, combining multiple object transformations$\unicode{x2014}$3D-rotations and scaling$\unicode{x2014}$further degrades the performance of all networks. Altogether, our results provide another measurement of the robustness of deep networks that is important to consider when using them in the real world. Code and datasets are available at https://github.com/amro-kamal/ObjectPose.