Scaling Up Your Kernels to 31x31: Revisiting Large Kernel Design in CNNs
We revisit large kernel design in modern convolutional neural networks (CNNs). Inspired by recent advances in vision transformers (ViTs), in this paper, we demonstrate that using a few large convolutional kernels instead of a stack of small kernels could be a more powerful paradigm. We suggested five guidelines, e.g., applying re-parameterized large depth-wise convolutions, to design efficient highperformance large-kernel CNNs. Following the guidelines, we propose RepLKNet, a pure CNN architecture whose kernel size is as large as 31×31, in contrast to commonly used 3×3. RepLKNet greatly closes the performance gap between CNNs and ViTs, e.g., achieving comparable or superior results than Swin Transformer on ImageNet and a few typical downstream tasks, with lower latency. RepLKNet also shows nice scalability to big data and large models, obtaining 87.8% top-1 accuracy on ImageNet and 56.0% mIoU on ADE20K, which is very competitive among the state-of-the-arts with similar model sizes. Our study further reveals that, in contrast to small-kernel CNNs, large kernel CNNs have much larger effective receptive fields and higher shape bias rather than texture bias.
Predict image
from mmpretrain import inference_model, get_model
model = get_model('replknet-31B_3rdparty_in1k', pretrained=True)
model.backbone.switch_to_deploy()
predict = inference_model(model, 'demo/bird.JPEG')
print(predict['pred_class'])
print(predict['pred_score'])
Use the model
import torch
from mmpretrain import get_model
model = get_model('replknet-31B_3rdparty_in1k', pretrained=True)
inputs = torch.rand(1, 3, 224, 224)
out = model(inputs)
print(type(out))
# To extract features.
feats = model.extract_feat(inputs)
print(type(feats))
Test Command
Prepare your dataset according to the docs.
Test:
python tools/test.py configs/replknet/replknet-31B_32xb64_in1k.py https://download.openmmlab.com/mmclassification/v0/replknet/replknet-31B_3rdparty_in1k_20221118-fd08e268.pth
Reparameterization
The checkpoints provided are all training-time
models. Use the reparameterize tool to switch them to more efficient inference-time
architecture, which not only has fewer parameters but also less calculations.
python tools/convert_models/reparameterize_model.py ${CFG_PATH} ${SRC_CKPT_PATH} ${TARGET_CKPT_PATH}
${CFG_PATH}
is the config file, ${SRC_CKPT_PATH}
is the source chenpoint file, ${TARGET_CKPT_PATH}
is the target deploy weight file path.
To use reparameterized weights, the config file must switch to the deploy config files.
python tools/test.py ${deploy_cfg} ${deploy_checkpoint} --metrics accuracy
You can also use backbone.switch_to_deploy()
to switch to the deploy mode in Python code. For example:
from mmpretrain.models import RepLKNet
backbone = RepLKNet(arch='31B')
backbone.switch_to_deploy()
Model | Pretrain | Params (M) | Flops (G) | Top-1 (%) | Top-5 (%) | Config | Download |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
replknet-31B_3rdparty_in1k * |
From scratch | 79.86 | 15.64 | 83.48 | 96.57 | config | model |
replknet-31B_3rdparty_in1k-384px * |
From scratch | 79.86 | 45.95 | 84.84 | 97.34 | config | model |
replknet-31B_in21k-pre_3rdparty_in1k * |
ImageNet-21k | 79.86 | 15.64 | 85.20 | 97.56 | config | model |
replknet-31B_in21k-pre_3rdparty_in1k-384px * |
ImageNet-21k | 79.86 | 45.95 | 85.99 | 97.75 | config | model |
replknet-31L_in21k-pre_3rdparty_in1k-384px * |
ImageNet-21k | 172.67 | 97.24 | 86.63 | 98.00 | config | model |
replknet-XL_meg73m-pre_3rdparty_in1k-320px * |
MEG73M | 335.44 | 129.57 | 87.57 | 98.39 | config | model |
Models with * are converted from the official repo. The config files of these models are only for inference. We haven't reprodcue the training results.
@inproceedings{ding2022scaling,
title={Scaling up your kernels to 31x31: Revisiting large kernel design in cnns},
author={Ding, Xiaohan and Zhang, Xiangyu and Han, Jungong and Ding, Guiguang},
booktitle={Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition},
pages={11963--11975},
year={2022}
}