CVLGOct 23, 2023

SAM-CLIP: Merging Vision Foundation Models towards Semantic and Spatial Understanding

U of Toronto
arXiv:2310.15308v4168 citationsh-index: 47
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for efficient, multi-capability vision models suitable for edge devices, though it is incremental as it builds on existing models.

The paper tackled the problem of merging distinct vision foundation models (CLIP for semantic understanding and SAM for spatial segmentation) into a unified model to reduce computational and storage costs, achieving new state-of-the-art results in zero-shot semantic segmentation with improvements of +6.8% and +5.9% mean IoU on Pascal-VOC and COCO-Stuff datasets.

The landscape of publicly available vision foundation models (VFMs), such as CLIP and Segment Anything Model (SAM), is expanding rapidly. VFMs are endowed with distinct capabilities stemming from their pre-training objectives. For instance, CLIP excels in semantic understanding, while SAM specializes in spatial understanding for segmentation. In this work, we introduce a simple recipe to efficiently merge VFMs into a unified model that absorbs their expertise. Our method integrates techniques of multi-task learning, continual learning, and distillation. Further, it demands significantly less computational cost compared to traditional multi-task training from scratch, and it only needs a small fraction of the pre-training datasets that were initially used to train individual models. By applying our method to SAM and CLIP, we obtain SAM-CLIP: a unified model that combines the capabilities of SAM and CLIP into a single vision transformer. Compared with deploying SAM and CLIP independently, our merged model, SAM-CLIP, reduces storage and compute costs for inference, making it well-suited for edge device applications. We show that SAM-CLIP not only retains the foundational strengths of SAM and CLIP, but also introduces synergistic functionalities, notably in zero-shot semantic segmentation, where SAM-CLIP establishes new state-of-the-art results on 5 benchmarks. It outperforms previous models that are specifically designed for this task by a large margin, including +6.8% and +5.9% mean IoU improvement on Pascal-VOC and COCO-Stuff datasets, respectively.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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