Abstract

Deep neural network-based semantic segmentation generally requires large-scale cost extensive annotations for training to obtain better performance. To avoid pixel-wise segmentation annotations that are needed for most methods, recently some researchers attempted to use object-level labels (e.g., bounding boxes) or image-level labels (e.g., image categories). In this paper, we propose a novel recursive coarse-to-fine semantic segmentation framework based on only image-level category labels. For each image, an initial coarse mask is first generated by a convolutional neural network-based unsupervised foreground segmentation model and then is enhanced by a graph model. The enhanced coarse mask is fed to a fully convolutional neural network to be recursively refined. Unlike the existing image-level label-based semantic segmentation methods, which require labeling of all categories for images that contain multiple types of objects, our framework only needs one label for each image and can handle images that contain multi-category objects. Only trained on ImageNet, our framework achieves comparable performance on the PASCAL VOC dataset with other image-level label-based state-of-the-art methods of semantic segmentation. Furthermore, our framework can be easily extended to foreground object segmentation task and achieves comparable performance with the state-of-the-art supervised methods on the Internet object dataset.

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