On Model Calibration for Long-Tailed Object Detection and Instance Segmentation

Abstract

Vanilla models for object detection and instance segmentation suffer from the heavy bias toward detecting frequent objects in the long-tailed setting. Existing methods address this issue mostly during training, e.g., by re-sampling or re- weighting. In this paper, we investigate a largely overlooked approach — post- processing calibration of confidence scores. We propose NORCAL, Normalized Calibration for long-tailed object detection and instance segmentation, a simple and straightforward recipe that reweighs the predicted scores of each class by its training sample size. We show that separately handling the background class and normalizing the scores over classes for each proposal are keys to achieving superior performance. On the LVIS dataset, NORCAL can effectively improve nearly all the baseline models not only on rare classes but also on common and frequent classes. Finally, we conduct extensive analysis and ablation studies to offer insights into various modeling choices and mechanisms of our approach. Our code is publicly available at NorCal.

Type
Publication
In Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 2021
Tai-Yu Daniel Pan
Tai-Yu Daniel Pan
Ph.D. Candidate

PhD candidate working on machine learning and computer vision at The Ohio State University