No Arabic abstract
The explosive increase of multimodal data makes a great demand in many cross-modal applications that follow the strict prior related assumption. Thus researchers study the definition of cross-modal correlation category and construct various classification systems and predictive models. However, those systems pay more attention to the fine-grained relevant types of cross-modal correlation, ignoring lots of implicit relevant data which are often divided into irrelevant types. Whats worse is that none of previous predictive models manifest the essence of cross-modal correlation according to their definition at the modeling stage. In this paper, we present a comprehensive analysis of the image-text correlation and redefine a new classification system based on implicit association and explicit alignment. To predict the type of image-text correlation, we propose the Association and Alignment Network according to our proposed definition (namely AnANet) which implicitly represents the global discrepancy and commonality between image and text and explicitly captures the cross-modal local relevance. The experimental results on our constructed new image-text correlation dataset show the effectiveness of our model.
Recent advances in using retrieval components over external knowledge sources have shown impressive results for a variety of downstream tasks in natural language processing. Here, we explore the use of unstructured external knowledge sources of images and their corresponding captions for improving visual question answering (VQA). First, we train a novel alignment model for embedding images and captions in the same space, which achieves substantial improvement in performance on image-caption retrieval w.r.t. similar methods. Second, we show that retrieval-augmented multi-modal transformers using the trained alignment model improve results on VQA over strong baselines. We further conduct extensive experiments to establish the promise of this approach, and examine novel applications for inference time such as hot-swapping indices.
Semantic segmentation requires a lot of training data, which necessitates costly annotation. There have been many studies on unsupervised domain adaptation (UDA) from one domain to another, e.g., from computer graphics to real images. However, there is still a gap in accuracy between UDA and supervised training on native domain data. It is arguably attributable to class-level misalignment between the source and target domain data. To cope with this, we propose a method that applies adversarial training to align two feature distributions in the target domain. It uses a self-training framework to split the image into two regions (i.e., trusted and untrusted), which form two distributions to align in the feature space. We term this approach cross-region adaptation (CRA) to distinguish from the previous methods of aligning different domain distributions, which we call cross-domain adaptation (CDA). CRA can be applied after any CDA method. Experimental results show that this always improves the accuracy of the combined CDA method, having updated the state-of-the-art.
Despite the achievements of large-scale multimodal pre-training approaches, cross-modal retrieval, e.g., image-text retrieval, remains a challenging task. To bridge the semantic gap between the two modalities, previous studies mainly focus on word-region alignment at the object level, lacking the matching between the linguistic relation among the words and the visual relation among the regions. The neglect of such relation consistency impairs the contextualized representation of image-text pairs and hinders the model performance and the interpretability. In this paper, we first propose a novel metric, Intra-modal Self-attention Distance (ISD), to quantify the relation consistency by measuring the semantic distance between linguistic and visual relations. In response, we present Inter-modal Alignment on Intra-modal Self-attentions (IAIS), a regularized training method to optimize the ISD and calibrate intra-modal self-attentions from the two modalities mutually via inter-modal alignment. The IAIS regularizer boosts the performance of prevailing models on Flickr30k and MS COCO datasets by a considerable margin, which demonstrates the superiority of our approach.
With the rise and development of deep learning over the past decade, there has been a steady momentum of innovation and breakthroughs that convincingly push the state-of-the-art of cross-modal analytics between vision and language in multimedia field. Nevertheless, there has not been an open-source codebase in support of training and deploying numerous neural network models for cross-modal analytics in a unified and modular fashion. In this work, we propose X-modaler -- a versatile and high-performance codebase that encapsulates the state-of-the-art cross-modal analytics into several general-purpose stages (e.g., pre-processing, encoder, cross-modal interaction, decoder, and decode strategy). Each stage is empowered with the functionality that covers a series of modules widely adopted in state-of-the-arts and allows seamless switching in between. This way naturally enables a flexible implementation of state-of-the-art algorithms for image captioning, video captioning, and vision-language pre-training, aiming to facilitate the rapid development of research community. Meanwhile, since the effective modular designs in several stages (e.g., cross-modal interaction) are shared across different vision-language tasks, X-modaler can be simply extended to power startup prototypes for other tasks in cross-modal analytics, including visual question answering, visual commonsense reasoning, and cross-modal retrieval. X-modaler is an Apache-licensed codebase, and its source codes, sample projects and pre-trained models are available on-line: https://github.com/YehLi/xmodaler.
Few-shot video classification aims to learn new video categories with only a few labeled examples, alleviating the burden of costly annotation in real-world applications. However, it is particularly challenging to learn a class-invariant spatial-temporal representation in such a setting. To address this, we propose a novel matching-based few-shot learning strategy for video sequences in this work. Our main idea is to introduce an implicit temporal alignment for a video pair, capable of estimating the similarity between them in an accurate and robust manner. Moreover, we design an effective context encoding module to incorporate spatial and feature channel context, resulting in better modeling of intra-class variations. To train our model, we develop a multi-task loss for learning video matching, leading to video features with better generalization. Extensive experimental results on two challenging benchmarks, show that our method outperforms the prior arts with a sizable margin on SomethingSomething-V2 and competitive results on Kinetics.