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Dense Distinct Query for End-to-End Object Detection

About

One-to-one label assignment in object detection has successfully obviated the need for non-maximum suppression (NMS) as postprocessing and makes the pipeline end-to-end. However, it triggers a new dilemma as the widely used sparse queries cannot guarantee a high recall, while dense queries inevitably bring more similar queries and encounter optimization difficulties. As both sparse and dense queries are problematic, then what are the expected queries in end-to-end object detection? This paper shows that the solution should be Dense Distinct Queries (DDQ). Concretely, we first lay dense queries like traditional detectors and then select distinct ones for one-to-one assignments. DDQ blends the advantages of traditional and recent end-to-end detectors and significantly improves the performance of various detectors including FCN, R-CNN, and DETRs. Most impressively, DDQ-DETR achieves 52.1 AP on MS-COCO dataset within 12 epochs using a ResNet-50 backbone, outperforming all existing detectors in the same setting. DDQ also shares the benefit of end-to-end detectors in crowded scenes and achieves 93.8 AP on CrowdHuman. We hope DDQ can inspire researchers to consider the complementarity between traditional methods and end-to-end detectors. The source code can be found at \url{https://github.com/jshilong/DDQ}.

Shilong Zhang, Xinjiang Wang, Jiaqi Wang, Jiangmiao Pang, Chengqi Lyu, Wenwei Zhang, Ping Luo, Kai Chen• 2023

Related benchmarks

TaskDatasetResultRank
Object DetectionCOCO 2017 (val)
AP52
2454
Object DetectionCOCO (test-dev)
mAP58.8
1195
Object DetectionCOCO (val)
mAP58.7
613
Object DetectionCOCO (minival)
mAP52
184
Object DetectionFLIR (test)
mAP500.739
83
Object DetectionLLVIP
mAP5093.9
58
Object DetectionFLIR
mAP37.1
40
Object DetectionLLVIP (test)
mAP5093.9
38
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