CVMar 17, 2023

Bidirectional Domain Mixup for Domain Adaptive Semantic Segmentation

arXiv:2303.09779v114 citationsh-index: 28
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses domain adaptation for semantic segmentation, an incremental improvement that enhances model performance in cross-domain scenarios.

The paper tackles domain adaptive semantic segmentation by proposing Bidirectional Domain Mixup (BDM), a mixup strategy that cuts unconfident regions and pastes patches from the other domain, leading to significant improvements when combined with state-of-the-art adaptation models.

Mixup provides interpolated training samples and allows the model to obtain smoother decision boundaries for better generalization. The idea can be naturally applied to the domain adaptation task, where we can mix the source and target samples to obtain domain-mixed samples for better adaptation. However, the extension of the idea from classification to segmentation (i.e., structured output) is nontrivial. This paper systematically studies the impact of mixup under the domain adaptaive semantic segmentation task and presents a simple yet effective mixup strategy called Bidirectional Domain Mixup (BDM). In specific, we achieve domain mixup in two-step: cut and paste. Given the warm-up model trained from any adaptation techniques, we forward the source and target samples and perform a simple threshold-based cut out of the unconfident regions (cut). After then, we fill-in the dropped regions with the other domain region patches (paste). In doing so, we jointly consider class distribution, spatial structure, and pseudo label confidence. Based on our analysis, we found that BDM leaves domain transferable regions by cutting, balances the dataset-level class distribution while preserving natural scene context by pasting. We coupled our proposal with various state-of-the-art adaptation models and observe significant improvement consistently. We also provide extensive ablation experiments to empirically verify our main components of the framework. Visit our project page with the code at https://sites.google.com/view/bidirectional-domain-mixup

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