Generating Inverse Feature Space for Class Imbalance in Point Cloud Semantic Segmentation.

Journal: IEEE transactions on pattern analysis and machine intelligence
Published Date:

Abstract

Point cloud semantic segmentation can enhance the understanding of the production environment and is a crucial component of vision tasks. The efficacy and generalization prowess of deep learning-based segmentation models are inherently contingent upon the quality and nature of the data employed in their training. However, it is often challenging to obtain data with inter-class balance, and training an intelligent segmentation network with the imbalanced data may cause cognitive bias. In this paper, a network framework InvSpaceNet is proposed, which generates an inverse feature space to alleviate the cognitive bias caused by imbalanced data. Specifically, we design a dual-branch training architecture that combines the superior feature representations derived from instance-balanced sampling data with the cognitive corrections introduced by the proposed inverse sampling data. In the inverse feature space of the point cloud generated by the auxiliary branch, the central points aggregated by class are constrained by the contrastive loss. To refine the class cognition in the inverse feature space, features are used to generate point cloud class prototypes through momentum update. These class prototypes from the inverse space are utilized to generate feature maps and structure maps that are aligned with the positive feature space of the main branch segmentation network. The training of the main branch is dynamically guided through gradients back propagated from different losses. Extensive experiments conducted on four large benchmarks (i.e., S3DIS, ScanNet v2, Toronto-3D, and SemanticKITTI) demonstrate that the proposed method can effectively mitigate point cloud imbalance issues and improve segmentation performance.

Authors

  • Jiawei Han
    Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA Institute of Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
  • Kaiqi Liu
  • Wei Li
    Department of Nephrology, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangxi Medical University, Nanning, Guangxi, China.
  • Feng Zhang
    Institute of Food Safety, Chinese Academy of Inspection and Quarantine, Beijing 100176, China; Key Laboratory of Food Quality and Safety for State Market Regulation, Beijing 100176, China. Electronic address: fengzhang@126.com.
  • Xiang-Gen Xia

Keywords

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