Rapid Salient Object Detection with Difference Convolutional Neural Networks
It addresses the need for real-time salient object detection on devices like Jetson Orin, offering significant speed improvements over existing lightweight models, though it is incremental in its approach.
This paper tackles the problem of deploying salient object detection on resource-constrained devices by proposing efficient CNN designs that incorporate pixel difference convolutions and reparameterization strategies, achieving speeds of 46 FPS for images and 150 FPS for videos with less than 1M parameters while maintaining superior accuracy.
This paper addresses the challenge of deploying salient object detection (SOD) on resource-constrained devices with real-time performance. While recent advances in deep neural networks have improved SOD, existing top-leading models are computationally expensive. We propose an efficient network design that combines traditional wisdom on SOD and the representation power of modern CNNs. Like biologically-inspired classical SOD methods relying on computing contrast cues to determine saliency of image regions, our model leverages Pixel Difference Convolutions (PDCs) to encode the feature contrasts. Differently, PDCs are incorporated in a CNN architecture so that the valuable contrast cues are extracted from rich feature maps. For efficiency, we introduce a difference convolution reparameterization (DCR) strategy that embeds PDCs into standard convolutions, eliminating computation and parameters at inference. Additionally, we introduce SpatioTemporal Difference Convolution (STDC) for video SOD, enhancing the standard 3D convolution with spatiotemporal contrast capture. Our models, SDNet for image SOD and STDNet for video SOD, achieve significant improvements in efficiency-accuracy trade-offs. On a Jetson Orin device, our models with $<$ 1M parameters operate at 46 FPS and 150 FPS on streamed images and videos, surpassing the second-best lightweight models in our experiments by more than $2\times$ and $3\times$ in speed with superior accuracy. Code will be available at https://github.com/hellozhuo/stdnet.git.