Human Detection Module Development Tutorial¶
I. Overview¶
Human detection is a subtask of object detection, which utilizes computer vision technology to identify the presence of pedestrians in images or videos and provide the specific location information for each pedestrian. This information is crucial for various applications such as intelligent video surveillance, human behavior analysis, autonomous driving, and intelligent robots.
II. Supported Model List¶
Model | Model Download Link | mAP(0.5:0.95) | mAP(0.5) | GPU Inference Time (ms) [Normal Mode / High-Performance Mode] |
CPU Inference Time (ms) [Normal Mode / High-Performance Mode] |
Model Size (M) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PP-YOLOE-L_human | Inference Model/Trained Model | 48.0 | 81.9 | 33.27 / 9.19 | 173.72 / 173.72 | 196.02 | Human detection model based on PP-YOLOE |
PP-YOLOE-S_human | Inference Model/Trained Model | 42.5 | 77.9 | 9.94 / 3.42 | 54.48 / 46.52 | 28.79 |
Test Environment Description:
- Performance Test Environment
- Test Dataset: The evaluation set for the above accuracy metrics is CrowdHuman dataset mAP(0.5:0.95).
-
Hardware Configuration:
- GPU: NVIDIA Tesla T4
- CPU: Intel Xeon Gold 6271C @ 2.60GHz
- Other Environments: Ubuntu 20.04 / cuDNN 8.6 / TensorRT 8.5.2.2
-
Inference Mode Description
Mode | GPU Configuration | CPU Configuration | Acceleration Technology Combination |
---|---|---|---|
Normal Mode | FP32 Precision / No TRT Acceleration | FP32 Precision / 8 Threads | PaddleInference |
High-Performance Mode | Optimal combination of pre-selected precision types and acceleration strategies | FP32 Precision / 8 Threads | Pre-selected optimal backend (Paddle/OpenVINO/TRT, etc.) |
III. Quick Integration¶
❗ Before quick integration, please install the PaddleX wheel package. For detailed instructions, refer to PaddleX Local Installation Guide
After installing the wheel package, you can perform human detection with just a few lines of code. You can easily switch between models in this module and integrate the human detection model inference into your project. Before running the following code, please download the demo image to your local machine.
from paddlex import create_model
model_name = "PP-YOLOE-S_human"
model = create_model(model_name)
output = model.predict("human_detection.jpg", batch_size=1)
for res in output:
res.print()
res.save_to_img("./output/")
res.save_to_json("./output/res.json")
After running, the result obtained is:
{'res': "{'input_path': 'human_detection.jpg', 'page_index': None, 'boxes': [{'cls_id': 0, 'label': 'pedestrian', 'score': 0.9085694551467896, 'coordinate': [259.53326, 342.86493, 307.43408, 464.22394]}, {'cls_id': 0, 'label': 'pedestrian', 'score': 0.8818504810333252, 'coordinate': [170.22249, 317.11432, 260.24777, 470.12704]}, {'cls_id': 0, 'label': 'pedestrian', 'score': 0.8622929453849792, 'coordinate': [402.17957, 345.1815, 458.4271, 479.91724]}, {'cls_id': 0, 'label': 'pedestrian', 'score': 0.8577917218208313, 'coordinate': [522.5973, 360.11118, 614.3201, 480]}, {'cls_id': 0, 'label': 'pedestrian', 'score': 0.8485967516899109, 'coordinate': [25.010237, 338.83722, 57.340042, 426.11932]}, ... ]}"}
The meanings of the parameters in the running results are as follows:
- input_path
: The path of the input image to be predicted.
- page_index
: If the input is a PDF file, it represents the current page number of the PDF; otherwise, it is None
.
- boxes
: Information of each detected object.
- cls_id
: Class ID.
- label
: Class name.
- score
: Prediction score.
- coordinate
: Coordinates of the bounding box, in the format [xmin, ymin, xmax, ymax]
.
The visualization image is as follows:
The explanations for the methods, parameters, etc., are as follows:
create_model
instantiates a pedestrian detection model (here,PP-YOLOE-S_human
is used as an example), and the specific explanations are as follows:
Parameter | Parameter Description | Parameter Type | Options | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
model_name |
Name of the model | str |
None | None |
model_dir |
Path to store the model | str |
None | None |
threshold |
Threshold for filtering low-confidence objects | float/None/dict |
None | None |
- The
model_name
must be specified. After specifyingmodel_name
, the default model parameters built into PaddleX are used. Ifmodel_dir
is specified, the user-defined model is used. threshold
is the threshold for filtering low-confidence objects. The default isNone
, which means using the settings from the previous layer. The priority of parameter settings from highest to lowest is:predict parameter > create_model initialization > yaml configuration file
. Currently, two types of threshold settings are supported:float
, using the same threshold for all classes.-
dict
, where the key is the class ID and the value is the threshold, allowing different thresholds for different classes. Since pedestrian detection is a single-class detection, this setting is not required. -
The
predict()
method of the pedestrian detection model is called for inference prediction. Thepredict()
method has parametersinput
,batch_size
, andthreshold
, which are explained as follows:
Parameter | Parameter Description | Parameter Type | Options | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
input |
Data to be predicted, supporting multiple input types | Python Var /str /list |
|
None |
batch_size |
Batch size | int |
Any integer | 1 |
threshold |
Threshold for filtering low-confidence objects | float /dict /None |
|
None |
- The prediction results are processed, and the prediction result for each sample is of type
dict
. It supports operations such as printing, saving as an image, and saving as ajson
file:
Method | Method Description | Parameter | Parameter Type | Parameter Description | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
print() |
Print the results to the terminal | format_json |
bool |
Whether to format the output content using JSON indentation |
True |
indent |
int |
Specify the indentation level to beautify the output JSON data, making it more readable, only effective when format_json is True |
4 | ||
ensure_ascii |
bool |
Control whether to escape non-ASCII characters to Unicode . If set to True , all non-ASCII characters will be escaped; False retains the original characters, only effective when format_json is True |
False |
||
save_to_json() |
Save the results as a JSON file | save_path |
str |
The path to save the file. If it is a directory, the saved file name will be consistent with the input file name | None |
indent |
int |
Specify the indentation level to beautify the output JSON data, making it more readable, only effective when format_json is True |
4 | ||
ensure_ascii |
bool |
Control whether to escape non-ASCII characters to Unicode . If set to True , all non-ASCII characters will be escaped; False retains the original characters, only effective when format_json is True |
False |
||
save_to_img() |
Save the results as an image file | save_path |
str |
The path to save the file. If it is a directory, the saved file name will be consistent with the input file name | None |
- Additionally, it supports obtaining the visualization image with results and the prediction results through attributes, as follows:
Attribute | Attribute Description |
---|---|
json |
Get the prediction result in json format |
img |
Get the visualization image in dict format |
For more information on using PaddleX's single-model inference API, refer to PaddleX Single Model Python Script Usage Instructions.
IV. Custom Development¶
If you aim for higher accuracy with existing models, you can leverage PaddleX's custom development capabilities to develop better human detection models. Before using PaddleX to develop human detection models, ensure you have installed the PaddleDetection plugin for PaddleX. The installation process can be found in the PaddleX Local Installation Guide.
4.1 Data Preparation¶
Before model training, you need to prepare a dataset for the specific task module. PaddleX provides a data validation function for each module, and only data that passes validation can be used for model training. Additionally, PaddleX provides demo datasets for each module, which you can use to complete subsequent development. If you wish to use a private dataset for model training, refer to PaddleX Object Detection Task Module Data Annotation Tutorial.
4.1.1 Demo Data Download¶
You can download the demo dataset to a specified folder using the following commands:
cd /path/to/paddlex
wget https://paddle-model-ecology.bj.bcebos.com/paddlex/data/widerperson_coco_examples.tar -P ./dataset
tar -xf ./dataset/widerperson_coco_examples.tar -C ./dataset/
4.1.2 Data Validation¶
You can complete data validation with a single command:
python main.py -c paddlex/configs/modules/human_detection/PP-YOLOE-S_human.yaml \
-o Global.mode=check_dataset \
-o Global.dataset_dir=./dataset/widerperson_coco_examples
Check dataset passed !
. The validation result file will be saved in ./output/check_dataset_result.json
, and related outputs will be saved in the ./output/check_dataset
directory of the current directory. The output directory includes visualized example images and histograms of sample distributions.
👉 Details of validation results (click to expand)
The specific content of the validation result file is:
{
"done_flag": true,
"check_pass": true,
"attributes": {
"num_classes": 1,
"train_samples": 500,
"train_sample_paths": [
"check_dataset/demo_img/000041.jpg",
"check_dataset/demo_img/000042.jpg",
"check_dataset/demo_img/000044.jpg"
],
"val_samples": 100,
"val_sample_paths": [
"check_dataset/demo_img/001138.jpg",
"check_dataset/demo_img/001140.jpg",
"check_dataset/demo_img/001141.jpg"
]
},
"analysis": {
"histogram": "check_dataset/histogram.png"
},
"dataset_path": "widerperson_coco_examples",
"show_type": "image",
"dataset_type": "COCODetDataset"
}
In the above validation results, check_pass
being True
indicates that the dataset format meets the requirements. The explanations for other indicators are as follows:
attributes.num_classes
:The number of classes in this dataset is 1.attributes.train_samples
:The number of samples in the training set of this dataset is 500.attributes.val_samples
:The number of samples in the validation set of this dataset is 100.attributes.train_sample_paths
:A list of relative paths to the visualized images of samples in the training set of this dataset.attributes.val_sample_paths
: A list of relative paths to the visualized images of samples in the validation set of this dataset.
The dataset validation also analyzes the distribution of sample counts across all classes in the dataset and generates a histogram (histogram.png) to visualize this distribution.
4.1.3 Dataset Format Conversion / Dataset Splitting (Optional)¶
After completing the dataset verification, you can convert the dataset format or re-split the training/validation ratio by modifying the configuration file or appending hyperparameters.
👉 Details on Format Conversion / Dataset Splitting (Click to Expand)
(1) Dataset Format Conversion
Human detection does not support data format conversion.
(2) Dataset Splitting
Dataset splitting parameters can be set by modifying the CheckDataset
section in the configuration file. Some example parameters in the configuration file are explained below:
CheckDataset
:split
:enable
: Whether to re-split the dataset. Set toTrue
to enable dataset splitting, default isFalse
;train_percent
: If re-splitting the dataset, set the percentage of the training set. The type is any integer between 0-100, ensuring the sum withval_percent
is 100;
For example, if you want to re-split the dataset with a 90% training set and a 10% validation set, modify the configuration file as follows:
......
CheckDataset:
......
split:
enable: True
train_percent: 90
val_percent: 10
......
Then execute the command:
python main.py -c paddlex/configs/modules/human_detection/PP-YOLOE-S_human.yaml \
-o Global.mode=check_dataset \
-o Global.dataset_dir=./dataset/widerperson_coco_examples
After dataset splitting, the original annotation files will be renamed to xxx.bak
in their original paths.
The above parameters can also be set by appending command-line arguments:
python main.py -c paddlex/configs/modules/human_detection/PP-YOLOE-S_human.yaml \
-o Global.mode=check_dataset \
-o Global.dataset_dir=./dataset/widerperson_coco_examples \
-o CheckDataset.split.enable=True \
-o CheckDataset.split.train_percent=90 \
-o CheckDataset.split.val_percent=10
4.2 Model Training¶
Model training can be completed with a single command, taking the training of PP-YOLOE-S_human
as an example:
python main.py -c paddlex/configs/modules/human_detection/PP-YOLOE-S_human.yaml \
-o Global.mode=train \
-o Global.dataset_dir=./dataset/widerperson_coco_examples
- Specify the
.yaml
configuration file path for the model (here it isPP-YOLOE-S_human.yaml
,When training other models, you need to specify the corresponding configuration files. The relationship between the model and configuration files can be found in the PaddleX Model List (CPU/GPU)) - Specify the mode as model training:
-o Global.mode=train
- Specify the training dataset path:
-o Global.dataset_dir
Other related parameters can be set by modifying theGlobal
andTrain
fields in the.yaml
configuration file, or adjusted by appending parameters in the command line. For example, to specify training on the first two GPUs:-o Global.device=gpu:0,1
; to set the number of training epochs to 10:-o Train.epochs_iters=10
. For more modifiable parameters and their detailed explanations, refer to the PaddleX Common Configuration Parameters for Model Tasks.
👉 More Details (Click to Expand)
- During model training, PaddleX automatically saves model weight files, defaulting to
output
. To specify a save path, use the-o Global.output
field in the configuration file. - PaddleX shields you from the concepts of dynamic graph weights and static graph weights. During model training, both dynamic and static graph weights are produced, and static graph weights are selected by default for model inference.
-
After completing the model training, all outputs are saved in the specified output directory (default is
./output/
), typically including: -
train_result.json
: Training result record file, recording whether the training task was completed normally, as well as the output weight metrics, related file paths, etc.; train.log
: Training log file, recording changes in model metrics and loss during training;config.yaml
: Training configuration file, recording the hyperparameter configuration for this training session;.pdparams
,.pdema
,.pdopt.pdstate
,.pdiparams
,.pdmodel
: Model weight-related files, including network parameters, optimizer, EMA, static graph network parameters, static graph network structure, etc.;
4.3 Model Evaluation¶
After completing model training, you can evaluate the specified model weight file on the validation set to verify the model's accuracy. Using PaddleX for model evaluation, you can complete the evaluation with a single command:
python main.py -c paddlex/configs/modules/human_detection/PP-YOLOE-S_human.yaml \
-o Global.mode=evaluate \
-o Global.dataset_dir=./dataset/widerperson_coco_examples
- Specify the path to the
.yaml
configuration file for the model(here it'sPP-YOLOE-S_human.yaml
) - Set the mode to model evaluation:
-o Global.mode=evaluate
- Specify the path to the validation dataset:
-o Global.dataset_dir
Other related parameters can be configured by modifying the fields underGlobal
andEvaluate
in the.yaml
configuration file. For detailed information, please refer toPaddleX Common Configuration Parameters for Models。
👉 More Details (Click to Expand)
When evaluating the model, you need to specify the model weights file path. Each configuration file has a default weight save path built-in. If you need to change it, simply set it by appending a command line parameter, such as -o Evaluate.weight_path=./output/best_model/best_model/model.pdparams
.
After completing the model evaluation, an evaluate_result.json
file will be generated, which records the evaluation results, specifically whether the evaluation task was completed successfully, and the model's evaluation metrics, including AP.
4.4 Model Inference¶
After completing model training and evaluation, you can use the trained model weights for inference prediction. In PaddleX, model inference prediction can be achieved through two methods: command line and wheel package.
4.4.1 Model Inference¶
-
To perform inference prediction through the command line, simply use the following command. Before running the following code, please download the demo image to your local machine.
Similar to model training and evaluation, the following steps are required: -
Specify the
.yaml
configuration file path of the model (here it isPP-YOLOE-S_human.yaml
) - Set the mode to model inference prediction:
-o Global.mode=predict
- Specify the model weights path:
-o Predict.model_dir="./output/best_model/inference"
- Specify the input data path:
-o Predict.input="..."
Other related parameters can be set by modifying the fields underGlobal
andPredict
in the.yaml
configuration file. For details, please refer to PaddleX Common Model Configuration File Parameter Description.
4.4.2 Model Integration¶
- Pipeline Integration
The pedestrian detection module can be integrated into PaddleX pipelines such as Human Keypoint Detection. You can update the keypoint detection module in the pipeline simply by replacing the model path. In pipeline integration, you can deploy your models using high-performance deployment and service deployment methods.
- Module Integration
The weights you produce can be directly integrated into the pedestrian detection module. You can refer to the Python example code in Quick Integration. Simply replace the model with the path to your trained model to complete the integration.
You can also use the PaddleX high-performance inference plugin to optimize the inference process of your model and further improve efficiency. For detailed procedures, please refer to the PaddleX High-Performance Inference Guide.