PAGen: Phase-guided Amplitude Generation for Domain-adaptive Object Detection
This work addresses domain-adaptive object detection, providing a practical solution for deploying neural networks in diverse environments like adverse weather or low-light scenes, though it is incremental in method.
The paper tackles the problem of unsupervised domain adaptation for object detection by adapting image styles in the frequency domain, achieving substantial performance gains on multiple benchmarks.
Unsupervised domain adaptation (UDA) greatly facilitates the deployment of neural networks across diverse environments. However, most state-of-the-art approaches are overly complex, relying on challenging adversarial training strategies, or on elaborate architectural designs with auxiliary models for feature distillation and pseudo-label generation. In this work, we present a simple yet effective UDA method that learns to adapt image styles in the frequency domain to reduce the discrepancy between source and target domains. The proposed approach introduces only a lightweight pre-processing module during training and entirely discards it at inference time, thus incurring no additional computational overhead. We validate our method on domain-adaptive object detection (DAOD) tasks, where ground-truth annotations are easily accessible in source domains (e.g., normal-weather or synthetic conditions) but challenging to obtain in target domains (e.g., adverse weather or low-light scenes). Extensive experiments demonstrate that our method achieves substantial performance gains on multiple benchmarks, highlighting its practicality and effectiveness.