Learning on the Edge: Investigating Boundary Filters in CNNs

Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) handle the case where filters extend beyond the image boundary using several heuristics, such as zero, repeat or mean padding. These schemes are applied in an ad-hoc fashion and, being weakly related to the image content and oblivious of the target task, result i...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of computer vision 2020-04, Vol.128 (4), p.773-782
Hauptverfasser: Innamorati, Carlo, Ritschel, Tobias, Weyrich, Tim, Mitra, Niloy J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) handle the case where filters extend beyond the image boundary using several heuristics, such as zero, repeat or mean padding. These schemes are applied in an ad-hoc fashion and, being weakly related to the image content and oblivious of the target task, result in low output quality at the boundary. In this paper, we propose a simple and effective improvement that learns the boundary handling itself. At training-time, the network is provided with a separate set of explicit boundary filters. At testing-time, we use these filters which have learned to extrapolate features at the boundary in an optimal way for the specific task. Our extensive evaluation, over a wide range of architectural changes (variations of layers, feature channels, or both), shows how the explicit filters result in improved boundary handling. Furthermore, we investigate the efficacy of variations of such boundary filters with respect to convergence speed and accuracy. Finally, we demonstrate an improvement of 5–20% across the board of typical CNN applications (colorization, de-Bayering, optical flow, disparity estimation, and super-resolution). Supplementary material and code can be downloaded from the project page:  http://geometry.cs.ucl.ac.uk/projects/2019/investigating-edge/ .
ISSN:0920-5691
1573-1405
DOI:10.1007/s11263-019-01223-y