Meta-Knowledge and Multi-Task Learning-Based Multi-Scene Adaptive Crowd Counting

In this paper, we propose a multi-scene adaptive crowd counting method based on metaknowledge and multi-task learning. In practice, surveillance cameras are stationarily deployed in various scenes. Considering the extensibility of a surveillance system, the ideal crowd counting method should have a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hu, G. (Author), Li, Y. (Author), Pan, Z. (Author), Tang, S. (Author), Wu, Y. (Author)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2022
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Online Access:View Fulltext in Publisher
Description
Summary:In this paper, we propose a multi-scene adaptive crowd counting method based on metaknowledge and multi-task learning. In practice, surveillance cameras are stationarily deployed in various scenes. Considering the extensibility of a surveillance system, the ideal crowd counting method should have a strong generalization capability to be deployed in unknown scenes. On the other hand, given the diversity of scenes, it should also effectively suit each scene for better performance. These two objectives are contradictory, so we propose a coarse-to-fine pipeline including meta-knowledge network and multi-task learning. Specifically, at the coarse-grained stage, we propose a generic two-stream network for all existing scenes to encode meta-knowledge especially inter-frame temporal knowledge. At the fine-grained stage, the regression of the crowd density map to the overall number of people in each scene is considered a homogeneous subtask in a multi-task framework. A robust multi-task learning algorithm is applied to effectively learn scene-specific regression parameters for existing and new scenes, which further improve the accuracy of each specific scenes. Taking advantage of multi-task learning, the proposed method can be deployed to multiple new scenes without duplicated model training. Compared with two representative methods, namely AMSNet and MAML-counting, the proposed method reduces the MAE by 10.29% and 13.48%, respectively. © 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
ISBN:14248220 (ISSN)
DOI:10.3390/s22093320