Counting Through Occlusion: Framework for Open World Amodal Counting

November 16, 2025 · Declared Dead · 🏛 arXiv.org

⏳ CAUSE OF DEATH: Coming Soon™
Promised but never delivered

"Paper promises code 'coming soon'"

Evidence collected by the PWNC Scanner

Authors Safaeid Hossain Arib, Rabeya Akter, Abdul Monaf Chowdhury, Md Jubair Ahmed Sourov, Md Mehedi Hasan arXiv ID 2511.12702 Category cs.CV: Computer Vision Citations 0 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 1 month ago
Abstract
Object counting has achieved remarkable success on visible instances, yet state-of-the-art (SOTA) methods fail under occlusion, a pervasive challenge in real world deployment. This failure stems from a fundamental architectural limitation where backbone networks encode occluding surfaces rather than target objects, thereby corrupting the feature representations required for accurate enumeration. To address this, we present CountOCC, an amodal counting framework that explicitly reconstructs occluded object features through hierarchical multimodal guidance. Rather than accepting degraded encodings, we synthesize complete representations by integrating spatial context from visible fragments with semantic priors from text and visual embeddings, generating class-discriminative features at occluded locations across multiple pyramid levels. We further introduce a visual equivalence objective that enforces consistency in attention space, ensuring that both occluded and unoccluded views of the same scene produce spatially aligned gradient-based attention maps. Together, these complementary mechanisms preserve discriminative properties essential for accurate counting under occlusion. For rigorous evaluation, we establish occlusion-augmented versions of FSC 147 and CARPK spanning both structured and unstructured scenes. CountOCC achieves SOTA performance on FSC 147 with 26.72% and 20.80% MAE reduction over prior baselines under occlusion in validation and test, respectively. CountOCC also demonstrates exceptional generalization by setting new SOTA results on CARPK with 49.89% MAE reduction and on CAPTUREReal with 28.79% MAE reduction, validating robust amodal counting across diverse visual domains. Code will be released soon.
Community shame:
Not yet rated
Community Contributions

Found the code? Know the venue? Think something is wrong? Let us know!

📜 Similar Papers

In the same crypt — Computer Vision

Died the same way — ⏳ Coming Soon™