Less is More: Learning from Synthetic Data with Fine-grained Attributes for Person Re-Identification

Abstract

Person re-identification (re-ID) plays an important role in applications such as public security and video surveillance. Recently, learning from synthetic data, which benefits from the popularity of synthetic data engine, has attracted great attention from the public eyes. However, existing datasets are limited in quantity, diversity and realisticity, and cannot be efficiently used for re-ID problem. To address this challenge, we manually construct a large-scale person dataset named FineGPR with fine-grained attribute annotations. Moreover, aiming to fully exploit the potential of FineGPR and promote the efficient training from millions of synthetic data, we propose an attribute analysis pipeline called AOST, which dynamically learns attribute distribution in real domain, then eliminates the gap between synthetic and real-world data and thus is freely deployed to new scenarios. Experiments conducted on benchmarks demonstrate that FineGPR with AOST outperforms (or is on par with) existing real and synthetic datasets, which suggests its feasibility for re-ID task and proves the proverbial less-is-more principle. Our synthetic FineGPR dataset is publicly available at https://github.com/JeremyXSC/FineGPR.

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