Abstract:Data augmentation has seen significant advancements in computer vision to improve model performance over the years, particularly in scenarios with limited and insufficient data. Currently, most studies focus on adjusting the image or its features to expand the size, quality, and variety of samples during training in various tasks including object detection. However, we argue that it is necessary to investigate bounding box transformations as a model regularization technique rather than image-level transformations, especially in aerial imagery due to potentially inconsistent bounding box annotations. Hence, this letter presents a thorough investigation of bounding box transformation in terms of scaling, rotation, and translation for remote sensing object detection. We call this augmentation strategy NBBOX (Noise Injection into Bounding Box). We conduct extensive experiments on DOTA and DIOR-R, both well-known datasets that include a variety of rotated generic objects in aerial images. Experimental results show that our approach significantly improves remote sensing object detection without whistles and bells and it is more time-efficient than other state-of-the-art augmentation strategies.
Abstract:Recently, numerous methods have achieved impressive performance in remote sensing object detection, relying on convolution or transformer architectures. Such detectors typically have a feature backbone to extract useful features from raw input images. For the remote sensing domain, a common practice among current detectors is to initialize the backbone with pre-training on ImageNet consisting of natural scenes. Fine-tuning the backbone is typically required to generate features suitable for remote-sensing images. However, this could hinder the extraction of basic visual features in long-term training, thus restricting performance improvement. To mitigate this issue, we propose a novel method named DBF (Dynamic Backbone Freezing) for feature backbone fine-tuning on remote sensing object detection. Our method aims to handle the dilemma of whether the backbone should extract low-level generic features or possess specific knowledge of the remote sensing domain, by introducing a module called 'Freezing Scheduler' to dynamically manage the update of backbone features during training. Extensive experiments on DOTA and DIOR-R show that our approach enables more accurate model learning while substantially reducing computational costs. Our method can be seamlessly adopted without additional effort due to its straightforward design.