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Accelerating Non-Maximum Suppression: A Graph Theory Perspective

King-Siong Si
Lu Sun
Weizhan Zhang
Tieliang Gong
Jiahao Wang
Jiang Liu
Hao Sun
Abstract

Non-maximum suppression (NMS) is an indispensable post-processing step in object detection. With the continuous optimization of network models, NMS has become the ``last mile'' to enhance the efficiency of object detection. This paper systematically analyzes NMS from a graph theory perspective for the first time, revealing its intrinsic structure. Consequently, we propose two optimization methods, namely QSI-NMS and BOE-NMS. The former is a fast recursive divide-and-conquer algorithm with negligible mAP loss, and its extended version (eQSI-NMS) achieves optimal complexity of O(nlogn)\mathcal{O}(n\log n). The latter, concentrating on the locality of NMS, achieves an optimization at a constant level without an mAP loss penalty. Moreover, to facilitate rapid evaluation of NMS methods for researchers, we introduce NMS-Bench, the first benchmark designed to comprehensively assess various NMS methods. Taking the YOLOv8-N model on MS COCO 2017 as the benchmark setup, our method QSI-NMS provides 6.2×6.2\times speed of original NMS on the benchmark, with a 0.1%0.1\% decrease in mAP. The optimal eQSI-NMS, with only a 0.3%0.3\% mAP decrease, achieves 10.7×10.7\times speed. Meanwhile, BOE-NMS exhibits 5.1×5.1\times speed with no compromise in mAP.

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