Abstract
Fisheye cameras play a crucial role in various fields by offering a wide field of view, enabling the capture of expansive areas within a single frame. Nonetheless, the radial distortion characteristics of fisheye lenses lead to notable shape deformation, particularly at the edges of the image, posing a significant challenge for accurate object detection. In this paper, we introduce a novel method, ‘VP-aided fine-tuning’, which harnesses the strengths of the pretraining–fine-tuning paradigm augmented by visual prompting (VP) to bridge the domain gap between undistorted standard datasets and distorted fisheye image datasets. Our approach involves two key elements: the use of VPs to effectively adapt a pretrained model to the fisheye domain, and a detailed 24-point regression of objects to fit the unique distortions of fisheye images. This 24-point regression accurately defines the object boundaries and substantially reduces the impact of environmental noise. The proposed method was evaluated against existing object detection frameworks on fisheye images, demonstrating superior performance and robustness. Experimental results also showed performance improvements with the application of VP, regardless of the variety of fine-tuning method applied.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 2054 |
Journal | Remote Sensing |
Volume | 16 |
Issue number | 12 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2024 by the authors.
Keywords
- fisheye image
- object detection
- visual prompting
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Research from Kyung Hee University Provides New Study Findings on Remote Sensing (Fisheye Object Detection with Visual Prompting-Aided Fine-Tuning)
20/06/24
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