Modeling camera effects to improve visual learning from synthetic data

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Abstract

Recent work has focused on generating synthetic imagery to increase the size and variability of training data for learning visual tasks in urban scenes. This includes increasing the occurrence of occlusions or varying environmental and weather effects. However, few have addressed modeling variation in the sensor domain. Sensor effects can degrade real images, limiting generalizability of network performance on visual tasks trained on synthetic data and tested in real environments. This paper proposes an efficient, automatic, physically-based augmentation pipeline to vary sensor effects – chromatic aberration, blur, exposure, noise, and color temperature – for synthetic imagery. In particular, this paper illustrates that augmenting synthetic training datasets with the proposed pipeline reduces the domain gap between synthetic and real domains for the task of object detection in urban driving scenes.

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Carlson, A., Skinner, K. A., Vasudevan, R., & Johnson-Roberson, M. (2019). Modeling camera effects to improve visual learning from synthetic data. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 11129 LNCS, pp. 505–520). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-11009-3_31

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