Learning A Robust RGB-Thermal Detector for Extreme Modality Imbalance
By: Chao Tian , Chao Yang , Guoqing Zhu and more
Potential Business Impact:
Helps cameras see better when one view is bad.
RGB-Thermal (RGB-T) object detection utilizes thermal infrared (TIR) images to complement RGB data, improving robustness in challenging conditions. Traditional RGB-T detectors assume balanced training data, where both modalities contribute equally. However, in real-world scenarios, modality degradation-due to environmental factors or technical issues-can lead to extreme modality imbalance, causing out-of-distribution (OOD) issues during testing and disrupting model convergence during training. This paper addresses these challenges by proposing a novel base-and-auxiliary detector architecture. We introduce a modality interaction module to adaptively weigh modalities based on their quality and handle imbalanced samples effectively. Additionally, we leverage modality pseudo-degradation to simulate real-world imbalances in training data. The base detector, trained on high-quality pairs, provides a consistency constraint for the auxiliary detector, which receives degraded samples. This framework enhances model robustness, ensuring reliable performance even under severe modality degradation. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of our method in handling extreme modality imbalances~(decreasing the Missing Rate by 55%) and improving performance across various baseline detectors.
Similar Papers
Modality-Decoupled RGB-Thermal Object Detector via Query Fusion
CV and Pattern Recognition
Helps cameras see clearly in bad weather.
Contrast-Guided Cross-Modal Distillation for Thermal Object Detection
CV and Pattern Recognition
Improves night vision cameras to see better.
BTMTrack: Robust RGB-T Tracking via Dual-template Bridging and Temporal-Modal Candidate Elimination
CV and Pattern Recognition
Tracks moving things better in dark or bad weather.