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What's There in the Dark
Published in IEEE Computer Society
2019
Volume: 2019-September
   
Pages: 2996 - 3000
Abstract
Scene Parsing is an important cog for modern autonomous driving systems. Most of the works in semantic segmentation pertains to day-time scenes with favourable weather and illumination conditions. In this paper, we propose a novel deep architecture, NiSeNet, that performs semantic segmentation of night scenes using a domain mapping approach of synthetic to real data. It is a dual-channel network, where we designed a Real channel using DeepLabV3+ coupled with an MSE loss to preserve the spatial information. In addition, we used an Adaptive channel reducing the domain gap between synthetic and real night images, which also complements the failures of Real channel output. Apart from the dual channel, we introduced a novel fusion scheme to fuse the outputs of two channels. In addition to that, we compiled a new dataset Urban Night Driving Dataset (UNDD); it consists of 7125 unlabelled day and night images; additionally, it has 75 night images with pixel-level annotations having classes equivalent to Cityscapes dataset. We evaluated our approach on the Berkley Deep Drive dataset, the challenging Mapillary dataset and UNDD dataset to exhibit that the proposed method outperforms the state-of-the-art techniques in terms of accuracy and visual quality. © 2019 IEEE.
About the journal
JournalData powered by TypesetProceedings - International Conference on Image Processing, ICIP
PublisherData powered by TypesetIEEE Computer Society
ISSN15224880
Open AccessNo