English

Speed/accuracy trade-offs for modern convolutional object detectors

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2017-04-26 v3

Abstract

The goal of this paper is to serve as a guide for selecting a detection architecture that achieves the right speed/memory/accuracy balance for a given application and platform. To this end, we investigate various ways to trade accuracy for speed and memory usage in modern convolutional object detection systems. A number of successful systems have been proposed in recent years, but apples-to-apples comparisons are difficult due to different base feature extractors (e.g., VGG, Residual Networks), different default image resolutions, as well as different hardware and software platforms. We present a unified implementation of the Faster R-CNN [Ren et al., 2015], R-FCN [Dai et al., 2016] and SSD [Liu et al., 2015] systems, which we view as "meta-architectures" and trace out the speed/accuracy trade-off curve created by using alternative feature extractors and varying other critical parameters such as image size within each of these meta-architectures. On one extreme end of this spectrum where speed and memory are critical, we present a detector that achieves real time speeds and can be deployed on a mobile device. On the opposite end in which accuracy is critical, we present a detector that achieves state-of-the-art performance measured on the COCO detection task.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1611.10012,
  title  = {Speed/accuracy trade-offs for modern convolutional object detectors},
  author = {Jonathan Huang and Vivek Rathod and Chen Sun and Menglong Zhu and Anoop Korattikara and Alireza Fathi and Ian Fischer and Zbigniew Wojna and Yang Song and Sergio Guadarrama and Kevin Murphy},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1611.10012},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

Accepted to CVPR 2017

R2 v1 2026-06-22T17:08:59.860Z