SSC3OD: Sparsely Supervised Collaborative 3D Object Detection from LiDAR Point Clouds
This work addresses the labor-intensive annotation bottleneck for autonomous driving systems, offering a practical solution with incremental novelty.
The paper tackles the problem of reducing annotation costs for collaborative 3D object detection in autonomous driving by proposing SSC3OD, a sparsely supervised framework that requires only one labeled object per agent, achieving effective performance improvements on large-scale datasets.
Collaborative 3D object detection, with its improved interaction advantage among multiple agents, has been widely explored in autonomous driving. However, existing collaborative 3D object detectors in a fully supervised paradigm heavily rely on large-scale annotated 3D bounding boxes, which is labor-intensive and time-consuming. To tackle this issue, we propose a sparsely supervised collaborative 3D object detection framework SSC3OD, which only requires each agent to randomly label one object in the scene. Specifically, this model consists of two novel components, i.e., the pillar-based masked autoencoder (Pillar-MAE) and the instance mining module. The Pillar-MAE module aims to reason over high-level semantics in a self-supervised manner, and the instance mining module generates high-quality pseudo labels for collaborative detectors online. By introducing these simple yet effective mechanisms, the proposed SSC3OD can alleviate the adverse impacts of incomplete annotations. We generate sparse labels based on collaborative perception datasets to evaluate our method. Extensive experiments on three large-scale datasets reveal that our proposed SSC3OD can effectively improve the performance of sparsely supervised collaborative 3D object detectors.