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Association, aiming to link bounding boxes of the same identity in a video sequence, is a central component in multi-object tracking (MOT). To train association modules, e.g., parametric networks, real video data are usually used. However, annotating person tracks in consecutive video frames is expensive, and such real data, due to its inflexibility, offer us limited opportunities to evaluate the system performance w.r.t changing tracking scenarios. In this paper, we study whether 3D synthetic data can replace real-world videos for association training. Specifically, we introduce a large-scale synthetic data engine named MOTX, where the motion characteristics of cameras and objects are manually configured to be similar to those in real-world datasets. We show that compared with real data, association knowledge obtained from synthetic data can achieve very similar performance on real-world test sets without domain adaption techniques. Our intriguing observation is credited to two factors. First and foremost, 3D engines can well simulate motion factors such as camera movement, camera view and object movement, so that the simulated videos can provide association modules with effective motion features. Second, experimental results show that the appearance domain gap hardly harms the learning of association knowledge. In addition, the strong customization ability of MOTX allows us to quantitatively assess the impact of motion factors on MOT, which brings new insights to the community.
Current multi-object tracking and segmentation (MOTS) methods follow the tracking-by-detection paradigm and adopt convolutions for feature extraction. However, as affected by the inherent receptive field, convolution based feature extraction inevitab
Modern multiple object tracking (MOT) systems usually follow the emph{tracking-by-detection} paradigm. It has 1) a detection model for target localization and 2) an appearance embedding model for data association. Having the two models separately exe
Driven by recent advances in object detection with deep neural networks, the tracking-by-detection paradigm has gained increasing prevalence in the research community of multi-object tracking (MOT). It has long been known that appearance information
Most end-to-end Multi-Object Tracking (MOT) methods face the problems of low accuracy and poor generalization ability. Although traditional filter-based methods can achieve better results, they are difficult to be endowed with optimal hyperparameters
In multi-object tracking, the tracker maintains in its memory the appearance and motion information for each object in the scene. This memory is utilized for finding matches between tracks and detections and is updated based on the matching result. M