Use tensorflow to implement a Deep Neural Network for real time lane detection mainly based on the IEEE IV conference paper "Towards End-to-End Lane Detection: an Instance Segmentation Approach".You can refer to their paper for details https://arxiv.org/abs/1802.05591. This model consists of a encoder-decoder stage, binary semantic segmentation stage and instance semantic segmentation using discriminative loss function for real time lane detection task.
The main network architecture is as follows:
This software has only been tested on ubuntu 16.04(x64), python3.5, cuda-9.0, cudnn-7.0 with a GTX-1070 GPU. To install this software you need tensorflow 1.10.0 and other version of tensorflow has not been tested but I think it will be able to work properly in tensorflow above version 1.10. Other required package you may install them by
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
In this repo I uploaded a model trained on tusimple lane dataset Tusimple_Lane_Detection. The deep neural network inference part can achieve around a 50fps which is similar to the description in the paper. But the input pipeline I implemented now need to be improved to achieve a real time lane detection system.
The trained lanenet model weights files are stored in new_lanenet_model_file. You can download the model and put them in folder model/tusimple_lanenet/
You can test a single image on the trained model as follows
python tools/test_lanenet.py --is_batch False --batch_size 1
--weights_path path/to/your/model_weights_file
--image_path data/tusimple_test_image/0.jpg
The results are as follows:
Test Input Image
Test Lane Mask Image
Test Lane Binary Segmentation Image
Test Lane Instance Segmentation Image
Test Lane Instance Embedding Image
If you want to test the model on a whole dataset you may call
python tools/test_lanenet.py --is_batch True --batch_size 2 --save_dir data/tusimple_test_image/ret
--weights_path path/to/your/model_weights_file
--image_path data/tusimple_test_image/
If you set the save_dir argument the result will be saved in that folder or the result will not be saved but be
displayed during the inference process holding on 3 seconds per image. I test the model on the whole tusimple lane
detection dataset and make it a video. You may catch a glimpse of it bellow.
Tusimple test dataset gif
Firstly you need to organize your training data refer to the data/training_data_example folder structure. And you need to generate a train.txt and a val.txt to record the data used for training the model.
The training samples are consist of three components. A binary segmentation label file and a instance segmentation label file and the original image. The binary segmentation use 255 to represent the lane field and 0 for the rest. The instance use different pixel value to represent different lane field and 0 for the rest.
All your training image will be scaled into the same scale according to the config file.
In my experiment the training epochs are 200000, batch size is 8, initialized learning rate is 0.0005 and decrease by multiply 0.1 every 100000 epochs. About training parameters you can check the global_configuration/config.py for details. You can switch --net argument to change the base encoder stage. If you choose --net vgg then the vgg16 will be used as the base encoder stage and a pretrained parameters will be loaded and if you choose --net dense then the dense net will be used as the base encoder stage instead and no pretrained parameters will be loaded. And you can modified the training script to load your own pretrained parameters or you can implement your own base encoder stage. You may call the following script to train your own model
python tools/train_lanenet.py --net vgg --dataset_dir data/training_data_example/
You can also continue the training process from the snapshot by
python tools/train_lanenet.py --net vgg --dataset_dir data/training_data_example/ --weights_path path/to/your/last/checkpoint
You may monitor the training process using tensorboard tools
During my experiment the Total loss
drops as follows:
The Binary Segmentation loss
drops as follows:
The Instance Segmentation loss
drops as follows:
The accuracy during training process rises as follows:
Please cite my repo lanenet-lane-detection if you find it helps you.
Adjust some basic cnn op according to the new tensorflow api. Use the traditional SGD optimizer to optimize the whole model instead of the origin Adam optimizer used in the origin paper. I have found that the SGD optimizer will lead to more stable training process and will not easily stuck into nan loss which may often happen when using the origin code.
I have uploaded a new lanenet model trained on tusimple dataset using the new code here new_lanenet_model_file. You may download the new model weights and update the new code. To update the new code you just need to
git pull origin master
The rest are just the same as which mentioned above. And recently I will release a new model trained on culane dataset.
- Add a embedding visualization tools to visualize the embedding feature map
- Add detailed explanation of training the components of lanenet separately.
- Training the model on different dataset
- Adjust the lanenet hnet model and merge the hnet model to the main lanenet model