Elucidating image-to-set prediction: An analysis of models, losses and datasets

11 Apr 2019  ·  Luis Pineda, Amaia Salvador, Michal Drozdzal, Adriana Romero ·

In this paper, we identify an important reproducibility challenge in the image-to-set prediction literature that impedes proper comparisons among published methods, namely, researchers use different evaluation protocols to assess their contributions. To alleviate this issue, we introduce an image-to-set prediction benchmark suite built on top of five public datasets of increasing task complexity that are suitable for multi-label classification (VOC, COCO, NUS-WIDE, ADE20k and Recipe1M). Using the benchmark, we provide an in-depth analysis where we study the key components of current models, namely the choice of the image representation backbone as well as the set predictor design. Our results show that (1) exploiting better image representation backbones leads to higher performance boosts than enhancing set predictors, and (2) modeling both the label co-occurrences and ordering has a slight positive impact in terms of performance, whereas explicit cardinality prediction only helps when training on complex datasets, such as Recipe1M. To facilitate future image-to-set prediction research, we make the code, best models and dataset splits publicly available at: https://github.com/facebookresearch/image-to-set.

PDF Abstract

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods


No methods listed for this paper. Add relevant methods here