JOURNAL ARTICLE

Conflict-Based Cross-View Consistency for Semi-Supervised Semantic Segmentation

Abstract

Semi-supervised semantic segmentation (SSS) has recently gained increasing research interest as it can reduce the requirement for large-scale fully-annotated training data. The current methods often suffer from the confirmation bias from the pseudo-labelling process, which can be alleviated by the co-training framework. The current co-training-based SSS methods rely on hand-crafted perturbations to prevent the different sub-nets from collapsing into each other, but these artificial perturbations cannot lead to the optimal solution. In this work, we propose a new conflict-based cross-view consistency (CCVC) method based on a two-branch co-training framework which aims at enforcing the two sub-nets to learn informative features from irrelevant views. In particular, we first propose a new cross-view consistency (CVC) strategy that encourages the two sub-nets to learn distinct features from the same input by introducing a feature discrepancy loss, while these distinct features are expected to generate consistent prediction scores of the input. The CVC strategy helps to prevent the two sub-nets from stepping into the collapse. In addition, we further propose a conflict-based pseudo-labelling (CPL) method to guarantee the model will learn more useful information from conflicting predictions, which will lead to a stable training process. We validate our new CCVC approach on the SSS benchmark datasets where our method achieves new state-of-the-art performance. Our code is available at https://github.com/xiaoyao3302/CCVC.

Keywords:
Computer science Consistency (knowledge bases) Benchmark (surveying) Segmentation Process (computing) Artificial intelligence Machine learning Feature (linguistics) Code (set theory) Data mining

Metrics

80
Cited By
14.56
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
84
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced Neural Network Applications
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Domain Adaptation and Few-Shot Learning
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
Multimodal Machine Learning Applications
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
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