Previous top-performing approaches for point cloud instance segmentation involve a bottom-up strategy, which often includes inefficient operations or complex pipelines, such as grouping over-segmented components, introducing additional steps for refining, or designing complicated loss functions. The inevitable variation in the instance scales can lead bottom-up methods to become particularly sensitive to hyper-parameter values. To this end, we propose instead a dynamic, proposal-free, data-driven approach that generates the appropriate convolution kernels to apply in response to the nature of the instances. To make the kernels discriminative, we explore a large context by gathering homogeneous points that share identical semantic categories and have close votes for the geometric centroids. Instances are then decoded by several simple convolutional layers. Due to the limited receptive field introduced by the sparse convolution, a small light-weight transformer is also devised to capture the long-range dependencies and high-level interactions among point samples. The proposed method achieves promising results on both ScanetNetV2 and S3DIS, and this performance is robust to the particular hyper-parameter values chosen. It also improves inference speed by more than 25% over the current state-of-the-art. Code is available at: https://git.io/DyCo3D
We address a critical yet largely unsolved anomaly detection problem, in which we aim to learn detection models from a small set of partially labeled anomalies and a large-scale unlabeled dataset. This is a common scenario in many important applications. Existing related methods either proceed unsupervised with the unlabeled data, or exclusively fit the limited anomaly examples that often do not span the entire set of anomalies. We propose here instead a deep reinforcement-learning-based approach that actively seeks novel classes of anomaly that lie beyond the scope of the labeled training data. This approach learns to balance exploiting its existing data model against exploring for new classes of anomaly. It is thus able to exploit the labeled anomaly data to improve detection accuracy, without limiting the set of anomalies sought to those given anomaly examples. This is of significant practical benefit, as anomalies are inevitably unpredictable in form and often expensive to miss. Extensive experiments on 48 real-world datasets show that our approach significantly outperforms five state-of-the-art competing methods.
Vision-and-Language Navigation (VLN) is unique in that it requires turning relatively general natural-language instructions into robot agent actions, on the basis of the visible environment. This requires to extract value from two very different types of natural-language information. The first is object description (e.g., 'table', 'door'), each presenting as a tip for the agent to determine the next action by finding the item visible in the environment, and the second is action specification (e.g., 'go straight', 'turn left') which allows the robot to directly predict the next movements without relying on visual perceptions. However, most existing methods pay few attention to distinguish these information from each other during instruction encoding and mix together the matching between textual object/action encoding and visual perception/orientation features of candidate viewpoints. In this paper, we propose an Object-and-Action Aware Model (OAAM) that processes these two different forms of natural language based instruction separately. This enables each process to match object-centered/action-centered instruction to their own counterpart visual perception/action orientation flexibly. However, one side-issue caused by above solution is that an object mentioned in instructions may be observed in the direction of two or more candidate viewpoints, thus the OAAM may not predict the viewpoint on the shortest path as the next action. To handle this problem, we design a simple but effective path loss to penalize trajectories deviating from the ground truth path. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed model and path loss, and the superiority of their combination with a 50% SPL score on the R2R dataset and a 40% CLS score on the R4R dataset in unseen environments, outperforming the previous state-of-the-art.
Anomaly detection, a.k.a. outlier detection, has been a lasting yet active research area in various research communities for several decades. There are still some unique problem complexities and challenges that require advanced approaches. In recent years, deep learning enabled anomaly detection, i.e., deep anomaly detection, has emerged as a critical direction. This paper reviews the research of deep anomaly detection with a comprehensive taxonomy of detection methods, covering advancements in three high-level categories and 11 fine-grained categories of the methods. We review their key intuitions, objective functions, underlying assumptions, advantages and disadvantages, and discuss how they address the aforementioned challenges. We further discuss a set of possible future opportunities and new perspectives on addressing the challenges.
Text based Visual Question Answering (TextVQA) is a recently raised challenge that requires a machine to read text in images and answer natural language questions by jointly reasoning over the question, Optical Character Recognition (OCR) tokens and visual content. Most of the state-of-the-art (SoTA) VQA methods fail to answer these questions because of i) poor text reading ability; ii) lacking of text-visual reasoning capacity; and iii) adopting a discriminative answering mechanism instead of a generative one which is hard to cover both OCR tokens and general text tokens in the final answer. In this paper, we propose a structured multimodal attention (SMA) neural network to solve the above issues. Our SMA first uses a structural graph representation to encode the object-object, object-text and text-text relationships appearing in the image, and then design a multimodal graph attention network to reason over it. Finally, the outputs from the above module are processed by a global-local attentional answering module to produce an answer that covers tokens from both OCR and general text iteratively. Our proposed model outperforms the SoTA models on TextVQA dataset and all three tasks of ST-VQA dataset. To provide an upper bound for our method and a fair testing base for further works, we also provide human-annotated ground-truth OCR annotations for the TextVQA dataset, which were not given in the original release.
Out-of-distribution (OOD) testing is increasingly popular for evaluating a machine learning system's ability to generalize beyond the biases of a training set. OOD benchmarks are designed to present a different joint distribution of data and labels between training and test time. VQA-CP has become the standard OOD benchmark for visual question answering, but we discovered three troubling practices in its current use. First, most published methods rely on explicit knowledge of the construction of the OOD splits. They often rely on ``inverting'' the distribution of labels, e.g. answering mostly 'yes' when the common training answer is 'no'. Second, the OOD test set is used for model selection. Third, a model's in-domain performance is assessed after retraining it on in-domain splits (VQA v2) that exhibit a more balanced distribution of labels. These three practices defeat the objective of evaluating generalization, and put into question the value of methods specifically designed for this dataset. We show that embarrassingly-simple methods, including one that generates answers at random, surpass the state of the art on some question types. We provide short- and long-term solutions to avoid these pitfalls and realize the benefits of OOD evaluation.
We present a novel mechanism to embed prior knowledge in a model for visual question answering. The open-set nature of the task is at odds with the ubiquitous approach of training of a fixed classifier. We show how to exploit additional information pertaining to the semantics of candidate answers. We extend the answer prediction process with a regression objective in a semantic space, in which we project candidate answers using prior knowledge derived from word embeddings. We perform an extensive study of learned representations with the GQA dataset, revealing that important semantic information is captured in the relations between embeddings in the answer space. Our method brings improvements in consistency and accuracy over a range of question types. Experiments with novel answers, unseen during training, indicate the method's potential for open-set prediction.
One of the primary challenges limiting the applicability of deep learning is its susceptibility to learning spurious correlations rather than the underlying mechanisms of the task of interest. The resulting failure to generalise cannot be addressed by simply using more data from the same distribution. We propose an auxiliary training objective that improves the generalization capabilities of neural networks by leveraging an overlooked supervisory signal found in existing datasets. We use pairs of minimally-different examples with different labels, a.k.a counterfactual or contrasting examples, which provide a signal indicative of the underlying causal structure of the task. We show that such pairs can be identified in a number of existing datasets in computer vision (visual question answering, multi-label image classification) and natural language processing (sentiment analysis, natural language inference). The new training objective orients the gradient of a model's decision function with pairs of counterfactual examples. Models trained with this technique demonstrate improved performance on out-of-distribution test sets.
Video anomaly detection is of critical practical importance to a variety of real applications because it allows human attention to be focused on events that are likely to be of interest, in spite of an otherwise overwhelming volume of video. We show that applying self-trained deep ordinal regression to video anomaly detection overcomes two key limitations of existing methods, namely, 1) being highly dependent on manually labeled normal training data; and 2) sub-optimal feature learning. By formulating a surrogate two-class ordinal regression task we devise an end-to-end trainable video anomaly detection approach that enables joint representation learning and anomaly scoring without manually labeled normal/abnormal data. Experiments on eight real-world video scenes show that our proposed method outperforms state-of-the-art methods that require no labeled training data by a substantial margin, and enables easy and accurate localization of the identified anomalies. Furthermore, we demonstrate that our method offers effective human-in-the-loop anomaly detection which can be critical in applications where anomalies are rare and the false-negative cost is high.