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Auxiliary Tasks Enhanced Dual-affinity Learning for Weakly Supervised Semantic Segmentation

Authors :
Xu, Lian
Bennamoun, Mohammed
Boussaid, Farid
Ouyang, Wanli
Sohel, Ferdous
Xu, Dan
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Most existing weakly supervised semantic segmentation (WSSS) methods rely on Class Activation Mapping (CAM) to extract coarse class-specific localization maps using image-level labels. Prior works have commonly used an off-line heuristic thresholding process that combines the CAM maps with off-the-shelf saliency maps produced by a general pre-trained saliency model to produce more accurate pseudo-segmentation labels. We propose AuxSegNet+, a weakly supervised auxiliary learning framework to explore the rich information from these saliency maps and the significant inter-task correlation between saliency detection and semantic segmentation. In the proposed AuxSegNet+, saliency detection and multi-label image classification are used as auxiliary tasks to improve the primary task of semantic segmentation with only image-level ground-truth labels. We also propose a cross-task affinity learning mechanism to learn pixel-level affinities from the saliency and segmentation feature maps. In particular, we propose a cross-task dual-affinity learning module to learn both pairwise and unary affinities, which are used to enhance the task-specific features and predictions by aggregating both query-dependent and query-independent global context for both saliency detection and semantic segmentation. The learned cross-task pairwise affinity can also be used to refine and propagate CAM maps to provide better pseudo labels for both tasks. Iterative improvement of segmentation performance is enabled by cross-task affinity learning and pseudo-label updating. Extensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach with new state-of-the-art WSSS results on the challenging PASCAL VOC and MS COCO benchmarks.<br />Comment: Accepted at IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks and Learning Systems. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2107.11787

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2403.01156
Document Type :
Working Paper