Skip to content

Training and fine-tuning YOLOv4 Tiny on custom object detection dataset for Taiwanese traffic

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

achen353/Taiwanese-Traffic-Object-Detection

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Object Detection on Taiwanese Traffic using YOLOv4 Tiny

Exploration of YOLOv4 Tiny on custom Taiwanese traffic dataset
Trained and tested AlexeyAB's Darknet YOLOv4 Tiny on Nvidia Tesla P100 GPU


Table of Contents

About

In this project, we trained and fine-tuned the YOLOv4 Tiny model on a custom dataset of Taiwanese traffic provided by the Embedded Deep Learning Object Detection Model Compression Competition for Traffic in Asian Countries as training data.

Released in April 2020 by AlexeyAB and his team, respectively, YOLOv4 became one of the fastest object recognition system on the market. It was even deployed as real-time object detection systems as a solution to traffic flow problems in Taiwanese cities such as Taoyuan City and in Hsinchu City.

The project explores the capability of YOLOv4 Tiny, the lightweight version of YOLOv4 developed by the same research team. Moreover, as there has been little publicly available object detection datasets on Taiwanese and Asian traffic (where large numbers of scooters and bicycles are present compared to most Western countries), we took the chance to utilize the dataset provided by Embedded Deep Learning Object Detection Model Compression Competition for Traffic in Asian Countries.

We achieved an 87.2% [email protected] at about 18-23 average FPS with Nvidia Tesla P100 GPU.

DISCLAIMER: This project is an application, not an implementation/modification, of YOLOv4 Tiny. Most of the code is from the original YOLOv4 repository.

Framework and Model

Both YOLOv4 and YOLOv4 Tiny are implemented by AlexeyAB and his team, based on the forked repository from Joseph Redmon's original work on YOLOv1, YOLOv2, and YOLOv3. While there are many implementations of the models in other frameworks such as Tensorflow and PyTorch, we decided to familiarize ourselves with the original Darknet framework.

Visit the original Darknet repo to learn more about the models themselves as well as implementations in other frameworks.

Dataset

The dataset consists of 89002 images of size 1920*1080. There are 4 annotated classes: vehicle, scooter, pedestrian, bicycle. All the images are provided with annotations as training data for the participants of the Embedded Deep Learning Object Detection Model Compression Competition for Traffic in Asian Countries. We used 80% of it as training data and 20% as validation (and test) data.

Mandated by the host of the competition, the data is kept confidential. However, we do provide the weights trained and demonstrations of the model's performance as provided below.

Results

Setting the model resolution 1280*704, we were able to achieve an 87.2% [email protected] at 18-23 FPS on average.


On the validation data:

detections_count = 435135, unique_truth_count = 147062
class_id = 0, name = vehicle, ap = 91.48%        (TP = 86140, FP = 8549)
class_id = 1, name = scooter, ap = 88.69%        (TP = 25877, FP = 2760)
class_id = 2, name = pedestrian, ap = 84.81%     (TP = 11759, FP = 1900)
class_id = 3, name = bicycle, ap = 83.77%        (TP = 1542, FP = 241)

for conf_thresh = 0.25, precision = 0.90, recall = 0.85, F1-score = 0.88
for conf_thresh = 0.25, TP = 125318, FP = 13450, FN = 21744, average IoU = 76.20 %

Below are examples of our model making inferences:

Sunny Day (Avg FPS: 23.0) Clear Night (Avg FPS: 19.7)
Rainy Day (Avg FPS: 20.2) Rainy Night (Avg FPS: 20.3)

Check out predictions folders if the .gif above are loading slow.

Setup

  1. Download archive file, unzip it, and put all the files in the root directory.
  2. Open your terminal, cd into where you'd like to clone this project, and clone the project:
$ git clone https://github.com/achen353/Taiwan-Traffic-Object-Detection.git
  1. Follow the steps in this article. It has very detailed instructions of setting up the environment for training YOLO models.

Note: Make sure your CUDA, cuDNN, CUDA driver and your hardware are compatible. Check compatibility here.

It is highly suggested that you run YOLO with a GPU. If you don't have a GPU, you can use the following free resources Google provides:

If you're training on a remote server via SSH session, this article will help you in keeping the terminal session alive even if you disconnect the SSH session.

How to Run

To train your own model on a custom dataset

The original repository has very detailed steps for training on a custom dataset

To inference using the pre-trained model provided by this project

  1. Get any .avi/.mp4 video file (preferably not more than 1920*1080 to avoid bottlenecks in CPU performance) and place them in where you prefer (we had sample_videos folder for this).
  2. Run make if you haven't and run (assume the file name is test.mp4):
$ ./darknet detector demo data/obj.data cfg/yolov4-tiny-obj.cfg yolov4-tiny-obj_best.weights sample_videos/test.mp4 -out_filename predictions/test.mp4

We have prediction folder made to keep the prediction outputs. If you don't want the video to pop up as the model makes inferences, add -dont_show flag in your command.

Credits