Domain Adaptation for Head Pose Estimation Using Relative Pose Consistency

Head pose estimation plays a vital role in biometric systems related to facial and human behavior analysis. Typically, neural networks are trained on head pose datasets. Unfortunately, manual or sensor-based annotation of head pose is impractical. A solution is synthetic training data generated from 3D face models, which can provide an infinite number of perfect labels. However, computer generated images only provide an approximation of real-world images, leading to a performance gap between training and application domain. Therefore, there is a need for strategies that allow simultaneous learning on labeled synthetic data and unlabeled real-world data to overcome the domain gap. In this work we propose relative pose consistency, a semi-supervised learning strategy for head pose estimation based on consistency regularization. Consistency regularization enforces consistent network predictions under random image augmentations, including pose-preserving and pose-altering augmentations. We propose a strategy to exploit the relative pose introduced by pose-altering augmentations between augmented image pairs, to allow the network to benefit from relative pose labels during training on unlabeled data. We evaluate our approach in a domain-adaptation scenario and in a commonly used cross-dataset scenario. Furthermore, we reproduce related works to enforce consistent evaluation protocols and show that for both scenarios we outperform SOTA.

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