Sign language recognition and translation first uses a recognition module to generate glosses from sign language videos and then employs a translation module to translate glosses into spoken sentences. Most existing works focus on the recognition step, while paying less attention to sign language translation. In this work, we propose a task-aware instruction network, namely TIN-SLT, for sign language translation, by introducing the instruction module and the learning-based feature fuse strategy into a Transformer network. In this way, the pre-trained model's language ability can be well explored and utilized to further boost the translation performance. Moreover, by exploring the representation space of sign language glosses and target spoken language, we propose a multi-level data augmentation scheme to adjust the data distribution of the training set. We conduct extensive experiments on two challenging benchmark datasets, PHOENIX-2014-T and ASLG-PC12, on which our method outperforms former best solutions by 1.65 and 1.42 in terms of BLEU-4. Our code is published at https://github.com/yongcaoplus/TIN-SLT.
The problem of effectively exploiting the information multiple data sources has become a relevant but challenging research topic in remote sensing. In this paper, we propose a new approach to exploit the complementarity of two data sources: hyperspectral images (HSIs) and light detection and ranging (LiDAR) data. Specifically, we develop a new dual-channel spatial, spectral and multiscale attention convolutional long short-term memory neural network (called dual-channel A3CLNN) for feature extraction and classification of multisource remote sensing data. Spatial, spectral and multiscale attention mechanisms are first designed for HSI and LiDAR data in order to learn spectral- and spatial-enhanced feature representations, and to represent multiscale information for different classes. In the designed fusion network, a novel composite attention learning mechanism (combined with a three-level fusion strategy) is used to fully integrate the features in these two data sources. Finally, inspired by the idea of transfer learning, a novel stepwise training strategy is designed to yield a final classification result. Our experimental results, conducted on several multisource remote sensing data sets, demonstrate that the newly proposed dual-channel A3CLNN exhibits better feature representation ability (leading to more competitive classification performance) than other state-of-the-art methods.
In spite of many dataset efforts for human action recognition, current computer vision algorithms are still limited to coarse-grained spatial and temporal annotations among human daily life. In this paper, we introduce a novel large-scale video dataset dubbed SEAL for multi-grained Spatio-tEmporal Action Localization. SEAL consists of two kinds of annotations, SEAL Tubes and SEAL Clips. We observe that atomic actions can be combined into many complex activities. SEAL Tubes provide both atomic action and complex activity annotations in tubelet level, producing 49.6k atomic actions spanning 172 action categories and 17.7k complex activities spanning 200 activity categories. SEAL Clips localizes atomic actions in space during two-second clips, producing 510.4k action labels with multiple labels per person. Extensive experimental results show that SEAL significantly helps to advance video understanding.
Temporal action detection (TAD) aims to detect the semantic labels and boundaries of action instances in untrimmed videos. Current mainstream approaches are multi-step solutions, which fall short in efficiency and flexibility. In this paper, we propose a unified network for TAD, termed Faster-TAD, by re-purposing a Faster-RCNN like architecture. To tackle the unique difficulty in TAD, we make important improvements over the original framework. We propose a new Context-Adaptive Proposal Module and an innovative Fake-Proposal Generation Block. What's more, we use atomic action features to improve the performance. Faster-TAD simplifies the pipeline of TAD and gets remarkable performance on lots of benchmarks, i.e., ActivityNet-1.3 (40.01% mAP), HACS Segments (38.39% mAP), SoccerNet-Action Spotting (54.09% mAP). It outperforms existing single-network detector by a large margin.
Vision Transformers have witnessed prevailing success in a series of vision tasks. However, they often require enormous amount of computations to achieve high performance, which is burdensome to deploy on resource-constrained devices. To address these issues, we draw lessons from depthwise separable convolution and imitate its ideology to design the Separable Vision Transformer, abbreviated as SepViT. SepViT helps to carry out the information interaction within and among the windows via a depthwise separable self-attention. The novel window token embedding and grouped self-attention are employed to model the attention relationship among windows with negligible computational cost and capture a long-range visual dependencies of multiple windows, respectively. Extensive experiments on various benchmark tasks demonstrate SepViT can achieve state-of-the-art results in terms of trade-off between accuracy and latency. Among them, SepViT achieves 84.0% top-1 accuracy on ImageNet-1K classification while decreasing the latency by 40%, compared to the ones with similar accuracy (e.g., CSWin, PVTV2). As for the downstream vision tasks, SepViT with fewer FLOPs can achieve 50.4% mIoU on ADE20K semantic segmentation task, 47.5 AP on the RetinaNet-based COCO detection task, 48.7 box AP and 43.9 mask AP on Mask R-CNN-based COCO detection and segmentation tasks.
Multi-source image registration is challenging due to intensity, rotation, and scale differences among the images. Considering the characteristics and differences of multi-source remote sensing images, a feature-based registration algorithm named Multi-scale Histogram of Local Main Orientation (MS-HLMO) is proposed. Harris corner detection is first adopted to generate feature points. The HLMO feature of each Harris feature point is extracted on a Partial Main Orientation Map (PMOM) with a Generalized Gradient Location and Orientation Histogram-like (GGLOH) feature descriptor, which provides high intensity, rotation, and scale invariance. The feature points are matched through a multi-scale matching strategy. Comprehensive experiments on 17 multi-source remote sensing scenes demonstrate that the proposed MS-HLMO and its simplified version MS-HLMO$^+$ outperform other competitive registration algorithms in terms of effectiveness and generalization.
We propose FindIt, a simple and versatile framework that unifies a variety of visual grounding and localization tasks including referring expression comprehension, text-based localization, and object detection. Key to our architecture is an efficient multi-scale fusion module that unifies the disparate localization requirements across the tasks. In addition, we discover that a standard object detector is surprisingly effective in unifying these tasks without a need for task-specific design, losses, or pre-computed detections. Our end-to-end trainable framework responds flexibly and accurately to a wide range of referring expression, localization or detection queries for zero, one, or multiple objects. Jointly trained on these tasks, FindIt outperforms the state of the art on both referring expression and text-based localization, and shows competitive performance on object detection. Finally, FindIt generalizes better to out-of-distribution data and novel categories compared to strong single-task baselines. All of these are accomplished by a single, unified and efficient model. The code will be released.
We propose an online tracking algorithm that performs the object detection and data association under a common framework, capable of linking objects after a long time span. This is realized by preserving a large spatio-temporal memory to store the identity embeddings of the tracked objects, and by adaptively referencing and aggregating useful information from the memory as needed. Our model, called MeMOT, consists of three main modules that are all Transformer-based: 1) Hypothesis Generation that produce object proposals in the current video frame; 2) Memory Encoding that extracts the core information from the memory for each tracked object; and 3) Memory Decoding that solves the object detection and data association tasks simultaneously for multi-object tracking. When evaluated on widely adopted MOT benchmark datasets, MeMOT observes very competitive performance.
We propose a memory efficient method, named Stochastic Backpropagation (SBP), for training deep neural networks on videos. It is based on the finding that gradients from incomplete execution for backpropagation can still effectively train the models with minimal accuracy loss, which attributes to the high redundancy of video. SBP keeps all forward paths but randomly and independently removes the backward paths for each network layer in each training step. It reduces the GPU memory cost by eliminating the need to cache activation values corresponding to the dropped backward paths, whose amount can be controlled by an adjustable keep-ratio. Experiments show that SBP can be applied to a wide range of models for video tasks, leading to up to 80.0% GPU memory saving and 10% training speedup with less than 1% accuracy drop on action recognition and temporal action detection.
With the rapid development of smart manufacturing, data-driven machinery health management has been of growing attention. In situations where some classes are more difficult to be distinguished compared to others and where classes might be organised in a hierarchy of categories, current DL methods can not work well. In this study, a novel hierarchical cavitation intensity recognition framework using Sub-Main Transfer Network, termed SMTNet, is proposed to classify acoustic signals of valve cavitation. SMTNet model outputs multiple predictions ordered from coarse to fine along a network corresponding to a hierarchy of target cavitation states. Firstly, a data augmentation method based on Sliding Window with Fast Fourier Transform (Swin-FFT) is developed to solve few-shot problem. Secondly, a 1-D double hierarchical residual block (1-D DHRB) is presented to capture sensitive features of the frequency domain valve acoustic signals. Thirdly, hierarchical multi-label tree is proposed to assist the embedding of the semantic structure of target cavitation states into SMTNet. Fourthly, experience filtering mechanism is proposed to fully learn a prior knowledge of cavitation detection model. Finally, SMTNet has been evaluated on two cavitation datasets without noise (Dataset 1 and Dataset 2), and one cavitation dataset with real noise (Dataset 3) provided by SAMSON AG (Frankfurt). The prediction accurcies of SMTNet for cavitation intensity recognition are as high as 95.32%, 97.16% and 100%, respectively. At the same time, the testing accuracies of SMTNet for cavitation detection are as high as 97.02%, 97.64% and 100%. In addition, SMTNet has also been tested for different frequencies of samples and has achieved excellent results of the highest frequency of samples of mobile phones.