No Arabic abstract
Recently spiking neural networks (SNNs), the third-generation of neural networks has shown remarkable capabilities of energy-efficient computing, which is a promising alternative for deep neural networks (DNNs) with high energy consumption. SNNs have reached competitive results compared to DNNs in relatively simple tasks and small datasets such as image classification and MNIST/CIFAR, while few studies on more challenging vision tasks on complex datasets. In this paper, we focus on extending deep SNNs to object tracking, a more advanced vision task with embedded applications and energy-saving requirements, and present a spike-based Siamese network called SiamSNN. Specifically, we propose an optimized hybrid similarity estimation method to exploit temporal information in the SNNs, and introduce a novel two-status coding scheme to optimize the temporal distribution of output spike trains for further improvements. SiamSNN is the first deep SNN tracker that achieves short latency and low precision loss on the visual object tracking benchmarks OTB2013/2015, VOT2016/2018, and GOT-10k. Moreover, SiamSNN achieves notably low energy consumption and real-time on Neuromorphic chip TrueNorth.
Siamese-based trackers have achieved excellent performance on visual object tracking. However, the target template is not updated online, and the features of the target template and search image are computed independently in a Siamese architecture. In this paper, we propose Deformable Siamese Attention Networks, referred to as SiamAttn, by introducing a new Siamese attention mechanism that computes deformable self-attention and cross-attention. The self attention learns strong context information via spatial attention, and selectively emphasizes interdependent channel-wise features with channel attention. The cross-attention is capable of aggregating rich contextual inter-dependencies between the target template and the search image, providing an implicit manner to adaptively update the target template. In addition, we design a region refinement module that computes depth-wise cross correlations between the attentional features for more accurate tracking. We conduct experiments on six benchmarks, where our method achieves new state of-the-art results, outperforming the strong baseline, SiamRPN++ [24], by 0.464->0.537 and 0.415->0.470 EAO on VOT 2016 and 2018. Our code is available at: https://github.com/msight-tech/research-siamattn.
In this paper, we focus on improving online multi-object tracking (MOT). In particular, we introduce a region-based Siamese Multi-Object Tracking network, which we name SiamMOT. SiamMOT includes a motion model that estimates the instances movement between two frames such that detected instances are associated. To explore how the motion modelling affects its tracking capability, we present two variants of Siamese tracker, one that implicitly models motion and one that models it explicitly. We carry out extensive quantitative experiments on three different MOT datasets: MOT17, TAO-person and Caltech Roadside Pedestrians, showing the importance of motion modelling for MOT and the ability of SiamMOT to substantially outperform the state-of-the-art. Finally, SiamMOT also outperforms the winners of ACM MM20 HiEve Grand Challenge on HiEve dataset. Moreover, SiamMOT is efficient, and it runs at 17 FPS for 720P videos on a single modern GPU. Codes are available in url{https://github.com/amazon-research/siam-mot}.
Deep neural networks (DNN) have achieved remarkable success in computer vision (CV). However, training and inference of DNN models are both memory and computation intensive, incurring significant overhead in terms of energy consumption and silicon area. In particular, inference is much more cost-sensitive than training because training can be done offline with powerful platforms, while inference may have to be done on battery powered devices with constrained form factors, especially for mobile or edge vision applications. In order to accelerate DNN inference, model quantization was proposed. However previous works only focus on the quantization rate without considering the efficiency of operations. In this paper, we propose Dendrite-Tree based Neural Network (DTNN) for energy-efficient inference with table lookup operations enabled by activation quantization. In DTNN both costly weight access and arithmetic computations are eliminated for inference. We conducted experiments on various kinds of DNN models such as LeNet-5, MobileNet, VGG, and ResNet with different datasets, including MNIST, Cifar10/Cifar100, SVHN, and ImageNet. DTNN achieved significant energy saving (19.4X and 64.9X improvement on ResNet-18 and VGG-11 with ImageNet, respectively) with negligible loss of accuracy. To further validate the effectiveness of DTNN and compare with state-of-the-art low energy implementation for edge vision, we design and implement DTNN based MLP image classifiers using off-the-shelf FPGAs. The results show that DTNN on the FPGA, with higher accuracy, could achieve orders of magnitude better energy consumption and latency compared with the state-of-the-art low energy approaches reported that use ASIC chips.
The current Siamese network based on region proposal network (RPN) has attracted great attention in visual tracking due to its excellent accuracy and high efficiency. However, the design of the RPN involves the selection of the number, scale, and aspect ratios of anchor boxes, which will affect the applicability and convenience of the model. Furthermore, these anchor boxes require complicated calculations, such as calculating their intersection-over-union (IoU) with ground truth bounding boxes.Due to the problems related to anchor boxes, we propose a simple yet effective anchor-free tracker (named Siamese corner networks, SiamCorners), which is end-to-end trained offline on large-scale image pairs. Specifically, we introduce a modified corner pooling layer to convert the bounding box estimate of the target into a pair of corner predictions (the bottom-right and the top-left corners). By tracking a target as a pair of corners, we avoid the need to design the anchor boxes. This will make the entire tracking algorithm more flexible and simple than anchorbased trackers. In our network design, we further introduce a layer-wise feature aggregation strategy that enables the corner pooling module to predict multiple corners for a tracking target in deep networks. We then introduce a new penalty term that is used to select an optimal tracking box in these candidate corners. Finally, SiamCorners achieves experimental results that are comparable to the state-of-art tracker while maintaining a high running speed. In particular, SiamCorners achieves a 53.7% AUC on NFS30 and a 61.4% AUC on UAV123, while still running at 42 frames per second (FPS).
Spiking neural networks (SNNs) offer an inherent ability to process spatial-temporal data, or in other words, realworld sensory data, but suffer from the difficulty of training high accuracy models. A major thread of research on SNNs is on converting a pre-trained convolutional neural network (CNN) to an SNN of the same structure. State-of-the-art conversion methods are approaching the accuracy limit, i.e., the near-zero accuracy loss of SNN against the original CNN. However, we note that this is made possible only when significantly more energy is consumed to process an input. In this paper, we argue that this trend of energy for accuracy is not necessary -- a little energy can go a long way to achieve the near-zero accuracy loss. Specifically, we propose a novel CNN-to-SNN conversion method that is able to use a reasonably short spike train (e.g., 256 timesteps for CIFAR10 images) to achieve the near-zero accuracy loss. The new conversion method, named as explicit current control (ECC), contains three techniques (current normalisation, thresholding for residual elimination, and consistency maintenance for batch-normalisation), in order to explicitly control the currents flowing through the SNN when processing inputs. We implement ECC into a tool nicknamed SpKeras, which can conveniently import Keras CNN models and convert them into SNNs. We conduct an extensive set of experiments with the tool -- working with VGG16 and various datasets such as CIFAR10 and CIFAR100 -- and compare with state-of-the-art conversion methods. Results show that ECC is a promising method that can optimise over energy consumption and accuracy loss simultaneously.