This model is a real-time neural network for object detection that detects 80 different classes.
Model | Download | Download (with sample test data) | ONNX version | Opset version | Accuracy |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Faster R-CNN R-50-FPN | 167.3 MB | 158.0 MB | 1.5 | 10 | mAP of 0.35 |
Faster R-CNN R-50-FPN-fp32 | 168.5 MB | 156.2 MB | 1.9 | 12 | mAP of 0.3437 |
Faster R-CNN R-50-FPN-int8 | 42.6 MB | 36.2 MB | 1.9 | 12 | mAP of 0.3399 |
Compared with the fp32 FasterRCNN-12, int8 FasterRCNN-12's mAP decline ratio is 1.11% and performance improvement is 1.43x.
Note the performance depends on the test hardware.
Performance data here is collected with Intel® Xeon® Platinum 8280 Processor, 1s 4c per instance, CentOS Linux 8.3, data batch size is 1.
Image shape (3x'height'x'width')
The images have to be loaded in to a range of [0, 255], resized, converted to BGR and then normalized using mean = [102.9801, 115.9465, 122.7717]. The transformation should preferably happen at preprocessing.
This model can take images of different sizes as input. However, to achieve best performance, it is recommended to resize the image such that both height and width are within the range of [800, 1333], and then pad the image with zeros such that both height and width are divisible by 32.
The following code shows how to preprocess the demo image:
import numpy as np
from PIL import Image
def preprocess(image):
# Resize
ratio = 800.0 / min(image.size[0], image.size[1])
image = image.resize((int(ratio * image.size[0]), int(ratio * image.size[1])), Image.BILINEAR)
# Convert to BGR
image = np.array(image)[:, :, [2, 1, 0]].astype('float32')
# HWC -> CHW
image = np.transpose(image, [2, 0, 1])
# Normalize
mean_vec = np.array([102.9801, 115.9465, 122.7717])
for i in range(image.shape[0]):
image[i, :, :] = image[i, :, :] - mean_vec[i]
# Pad to be divisible of 32
import math
padded_h = int(math.ceil(image.shape[1] / 32) * 32)
padded_w = int(math.ceil(image.shape[2] / 32) * 32)
padded_image = np.zeros((3, padded_h, padded_w), dtype=np.float32)
padded_image[:, :image.shape[1], :image.shape[2]] = image
image = padded_image
return image
img = Image.open('dependencies/demo.jpg')
img_data = preprocess(img)
The model has 3 outputs.
boxes: ('nbox'x4)
, in (xmin, ymin, xmax, ymax)
.
labels: ('nbox')
.
scores: ('nbox')
.
The following code shows how to patch the original image with detections and class annotations, filtered by scores:
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import matplotlib.patches as patches
classes = [line.rstrip('\n') for line in open('coco_classes.txt')]
def display_objdetect_image(image, boxes, labels, scores, score_threshold=0.7):
# Resize boxes
ratio = 800.0 / min(image.size[0], image.size[1])
boxes /= ratio
_, ax = plt.subplots(1, figsize=(12,9))
image = np.array(image)
ax.imshow(image)
# Showing boxes with score > 0.7
for box, label, score in zip(boxes, labels, scores):
if score > score_threshold:
rect = patches.Rectangle((box[0], box[1]), box[2] - box[0], box[3] - box[1], linewidth=1, edgecolor='b', facecolor='none')
ax.annotate(classes[label] + ':' + str(np.round(score, 2)), (box[0], box[1]), color='w', fontsize=12)
ax.add_patch(rect)
plt.show()
display_objdetect_image(img, boxes, labels, scores)
The original pretrained Faster R-CNN model is from facebookresearch/maskrcnn-benchmark, compute mAP the same as Detectron on coco_2014_minival
dataset from COCO, which is exactly equivalent to the coco_2017_val
dataset.
Metric is COCO box mAP (averaged over IoU of 0.5:0.95), computed over 2017 COCO val data. mAP of 0.353
Faster R-CNN R-50-FPN-fp32 is obtained by quantizing Faster R-CNN R-50-FPN-fp32 model. We use Intel® Neural Compressor with onnxruntime backend to perform quantization. View the instructions to understand how to use Intel® Neural Compressor for quantization.
onnx: 1.9.0 onnxruntime: 1.8.0
wget https://github.com/onnx/models/raw/main/vision/object_detection_segmentation/faster-rcnn/model/FasterRCNN-12.onnx
bash run_tuning.sh --input_model=path/to/model \ # model path as *.onnx
--config=faster_rcnn.yaml \
--data_path=path/to/COCO2017 \
--output_model=path/to/save
Shaoqing Ren, Kaiming He, Ross Girshick, and Jian Sun. Faster R-CNN: Towards Real-Time Object Detection with Region Proposal Networks. Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS), 2015.
Massa, Francisco and Girshick, Ross. maskrcnn-benchmark: Fast, modular reference implementation of Instance Segmentation and Object Detection algorithms in PyTorch. facebookresearch/maskrcnn-benchmark.
-
This model is converted from facebookresearch/maskrcnn-benchmark with modifications in repository.
- mengniwang95 (Intel)
- airMeng (Intel)
- ftian1 (Intel)
- hshen14 (Intel)
MIT License