Traditional Saliency Reloaded: A Good Old Model in New Shape

Abstract

In this paper, we show that the seminal, biologically-inspired saliency model by Itti et al. is still competitive with current state-of-the-art methods for salient object segmentation if some important adaptions are made. We show which changes are necessary to achieve high performance, with special emphasis on the scale-space: we introduce a twin pyramid for computing Difference-of-Gaussians, which enables a flexible center-surround ratio. The resulting system, called VOCUS2, is elegant and coherent in structure, fast, and computes saliency at the pixel level. It is not only suitable for images with few objects, but also for complex scenes as captured by mobile devices. Furthermore, we integrate the saliency system into an object proposal generation framework to obtain segment-based saliency maps and boost the results for salient object segmentation. We show that our system achieves state-of-the-art performance on a large collection of benchmark data.

Cite

Text

Frintrop et al. "Traditional Saliency Reloaded: A Good Old Model in New Shape." Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2015. doi:10.1109/CVPR.2015.7298603

Markdown

[Frintrop et al. "Traditional Saliency Reloaded: A Good Old Model in New Shape." Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2015.](https://mlanthology.org/cvpr/2015/frintrop2015cvpr-traditional/) doi:10.1109/CVPR.2015.7298603

BibTeX

@inproceedings{frintrop2015cvpr-traditional,
  title     = {{Traditional Saliency Reloaded: A Good Old Model in New Shape}},
  author    = {Frintrop, Simone and Werner, Thomas and Garcia, German Martin},
  booktitle = {Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition},
  year      = {2015},
  doi       = {10.1109/CVPR.2015.7298603},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/cvpr/2015/frintrop2015cvpr-traditional/}
}