The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences (Jun 2021)

TOWARDS LEARNING LOW-LIGHT INDOOR SEMANTIC SEGMENTATION WITH ILLUMINATION-INVARIANT FEATURES

  • N. Zhang,
  • F. Nex,
  • N. Kerle,
  • G. Vosselman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-XLIII-B2-2021-427-2021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. XLIII-B2-2021
pp. 427 – 432

Abstract

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Semantic segmentation models are often affected by illumination changes, and fail to predict correct labels. Although there has been a lot of research on indoor semantic segmentation, it has not been studied in low-light environments. In this paper we propose a new framework, LISU, for Low-light Indoor Scene Understanding. We first decompose the low-light images into reflectance and illumination components, and then jointly learn reflectance restoration and semantic segmentation. To train and evaluate the proposed framework, we propose a new data set, namely LLRGBD, which consists of a large synthetic low-light indoor data set (LLRGBD-synthetic) and a small real data set (LLRGBD-real). The experimental results show that the illumination-invariant features effectively improve the performance of semantic segmentation. Compared with the baseline model, the mIoU of the proposed LISU framework has increased by 11.5%. In addition, pre-training on our synthetic data set increases the mIoU by 7.2%. Our data sets and models are available on our project website.