SANSA: Unleashing the Hidden Semantics in SAM2 for Few-Shot Segmentation

Neural Information Processing Systems 

Few-shot segmentation aims to segment unseen categories from just a handful of annotated examples. This requires mechanisms to identify semantically related objects across images and accurately produce masks. We note that Segment Anything 2 (SAM2), with its prompt-and-propagate mechanism, provides strong segmentation capabilities and a built-in feature matching process. However, we show that its representations are entangled with task-specific cues optimized for object tracking, which impairs its use for tasks requiring higher level semantic understanding. Our key insight is that, despite its class-agnostic pretraining, SAM2 already encodes rich semantic structure in its features. We propose SANSA (Semantically AligNed SegmentAnything 2), a framework that makes this latent structure explicit, and repurposes SAM2 for few-shot segmentation through minimal task-specific modifications. SANSA achieves state-of-the-art on few-shot segmentation benchmarks designed to assess generalization and outperforms generalist methods in the popular in-context setting. Additionally, it supports flexible promptable interaction via points, boxes, or scribbles, and remains significantly faster and more compact than prior approaches.

Duplicate Docs Excel Report

Title
None found

Similar Docs  Excel Report  more

TitleSimilaritySource
None found