Elevating Amodal Segmentation Using ASH-Net Architecture for Accurate Object Boundary Estimation
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
IEEE Access
Abstract
Amodal segmentation is a critical task in the field of computer vision as it involves accurately estimating object boundaries that extend beyond occlusion. This paper introduces a network named after the Amodal Segmentation Head, ASH-Net, a novel architecture specifically designed for amodal segmentation. ASH-Net is comprised of a ResNet-50 backbone, a Feature Pyramid Network middle layer, and an Amodal Segmentation Head. The evaluation encompasses three diverse datasets, namely COCOA-cls, KINS, and D2SA, providing a comprehensive analysis of ASH-Net's capabilities. The results obtained demonstrate the superiority of ASH-Net in accurately estimating object boundaries beyond occlusion across multiple datasets. Specifically, ASH-Net achieves an Average Precision of 62.15% on the COCOA-cls dataset, 72.58% on the KINS dataset, and an impressive 91.4% on the D2SA dataset. Through extensive evaluation using average precision and average recall metrics, ASH-Net exhibits exceptional performance compared to state-of-the-art models. These findings highlight the remarkable performance of ASH-Net in overcoming occlusion challenges and accurately delineating object boundaries. This research identifies optimal training parameters, such as coefficient dimensions and aspect ratios, that significantly enhance segmentation performance while maintaining computational efficiency. The proposed ASH-Net architecture and its performance pave the way for improved object recognition, enhanced scene understanding, and the development of practical applications in various domains.
First Page
83377
Last Page
83389
DOI
10.1109/ACCESS.2023.3301724
Publication Date
1-1-2023
Recommended Citation
Raghavendra, S.; Rao, Divya; Abhilash, S. K.; and Nookala, Venu Madhav, "Elevating Amodal Segmentation Using ASH-Net Architecture for Accurate Object Boundary Estimation" (2023). Open Access archive. 9003.
https://impressions.manipal.edu/open-access-archive/9003