OGNet: Salient Object Detection with Output-guided Attention Module
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 20:35 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
An output-guided attention module using multi-scale outputs addresses blind overconfidence in salient object detection models.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Instead of applying the widely used self-attention module, the paper presents an output-guided attention module built with multi-scale outputs to overcome the problem of blind overconfidence. It also constructs a new loss function, the intractable area F-measure loss function, which is based on the F-measure of the hard-to-handle area to improve the detection effect of the model in the edge areas and confusing areas of an image.
What carries the argument
The output-guided attention module, which is built with multi-scale outputs to guide attention and avoid blind overconfidence from using processed feature maps as input.
Load-bearing premise
That guiding attention with multi-scale model outputs will overcome blind overconfidence without introducing new biases or requiring extensive tuning.
What would settle it
An experiment measuring overconfidence levels in self-attention versus output-guided attention on the same backbone, or ablation results showing no improvement in edge areas with the new loss.
Figures
read the original abstract
Attention mechanisms are widely used in salient object detection models based on deep learning, which can effectively promote the extraction and utilization of useful information by neural networks. However, most of the existing attention modules used in salient object detection are input with the processed feature map itself, which easily leads to the problem of `blind overconfidence'. In this paper, instead of applying the widely used self-attention module, we present an output-guided attention module built with multi-scale outputs to overcome the problem of `blind overconfidence'. We also construct a new loss function, the intractable area F-measure loss function, which is based on the F-measure of the hard-to-handle area to improve the detection effect of the model in the edge areas and confusing areas of an image. Extensive experiments and abundant ablation studies are conducted to evaluate the effect of our methods and to explore the most suitable structure for the model. Tests on several data sets show that our model performs very well, even though it is very lightweight.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proposes OGNet for salient object detection. It replaces standard self-attention with an output-guided attention module constructed from multi-scale outputs to address 'blind overconfidence', and introduces an intractable area F-measure loss based on F-measure of hard-to-handle regions to improve edge and confusing area detection. The paper states that extensive experiments and ablation studies confirm strong performance on several datasets while the model remains lightweight.
Significance. If the empirical results and module effectiveness are substantiated with quantitative evidence, the work could provide a lightweight alternative attention design and specialized loss for salient object detection, with potential relevance for efficient models handling difficult image regions.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the central performance claims ('performs very well', 'extensive experiments') are unsupported by any quantitative results, baselines, error bars, dataset names, or numerical comparisons, so the improvements asserted for the output-guided module and new loss cannot be evaluated.
- [Abstract] Abstract: the output-guided attention module is described only at a high level with no equations, formulation, or derivation showing why multi-scale outputs (rather than processed feature maps) overcome blind overconfidence; this is the load-bearing structural claim but lacks any supporting analysis or isolation of the effect.
- [Abstract] Abstract: the intractable area F-measure loss is introduced without a mathematical definition, computation details, or comparison to standard losses, leaving its claimed benefit for edge/confusing areas unassessable.
minor comments (1)
- The phrase 'intractable area' is used without definition or motivation; clarify its meaning and relation to the F-measure computation.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for these focused comments on the abstract. We agree that the abstract as submitted is insufficiently specific and will revise it to include quantitative support, a concise formulation of the attention module, and a definition of the loss function.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the central performance claims ('performs very well', 'extensive experiments') are unsupported by any quantitative results, baselines, error bars, dataset names, or numerical comparisons, so the improvements asserted for the output-guided module and new loss cannot be evaluated.
Authors: We agree that the abstract lacks concrete numbers and comparisons. In the revised version we will add the principal quantitative results (e.g., mean F-measure and MAE on the standard benchmarks), the main baselines, and the dataset names so that the performance claims can be directly assessed. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the output-guided attention module is described only at a high level with no equations, formulation, or derivation showing why multi-scale outputs (rather than processed feature maps) overcome blind overconfidence; this is the load-bearing structural claim but lacks any supporting analysis or isolation of the effect.
Authors: The abstract indeed presents the module at a summary level. We will insert a compact equation or formulation of the output-guided attention together with a one-sentence explanation of why multi-scale outputs reduce blind overconfidence, referencing the analysis already present in the body of the paper. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the intractable area F-measure loss is introduced without a mathematical definition, computation details, or comparison to standard losses, leaving its claimed benefit for edge/confusing areas unassessable.
Authors: We acknowledge the absence of any mathematical detail on the loss in the abstract. The revised abstract will contain a brief mathematical definition of the intractable-area F-measure loss and a short statement of how it differs from standard losses in its emphasis on hard regions. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; empirical architecture proposal with experimental validation
full rationale
The paper proposes an output-guided attention module and intractable area F-measure loss for salient object detection, claiming these address blind overconfidence and edge issues. No mathematical derivations, equations, or first-principles predictions appear in the provided text. Claims rest entirely on architectural description plus extensive experiments and ablations on datasets, with no reduction to fitted inputs, self-citations, or self-definitional steps. The derivation chain is self-contained as an empirical contribution.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
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