Troubleshooting Blind Image Quality Models in the Wild

Zhihua Wang, Haotao Wang, Tianlong Chen, Zhangyang Wang, Kede Ma; Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), 2021, pp. 16256-16265

Abstract


Recently, the group maximum differentiation competition (gMAD) has been used to improve blind image quality assessment (BIQA) models, with the help of full-reference metrics. When applying this type of approach to troubleshoot "best-performing" BIQA models in the wild, we are faced with a practical challenge: it is highly nontrivial to obtain stronger competing models for efficient failure-spotting. Inspired by recent findings that difficult samples of deep models may be exposed through network pruning, we construct a set of "self-competitors," as random ensembles of pruned versions of the target model to be improved. Diverse failures can then be efficiently identified via self-gMAD competition. Next, we fine-tune both the target and its pruned variants on the human-rated gMAD set. This allows all models to learn from their respective failures, preparing themselves for the next round of self-gMAD competition. Experimental results demonstrate that our method efficiently troubleshoots BIQA models in the wild with improved generalizability.

Related Material


[pdf] [arXiv]
[bibtex]
@InProceedings{Wang_2021_CVPR, author = {Wang, Zhihua and Wang, Haotao and Chen, Tianlong and Wang, Zhangyang and Ma, Kede}, title = {Troubleshooting Blind Image Quality Models in the Wild}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR)}, month = {June}, year = {2021}, pages = {16256-16265} }