Multimodal sentiment analysis is a trending topic with the explosion of multimodal content on the web. Present studies in multimodal sentiment analysis rely on large-scale supervised data. Collating supervised data is time-consuming and labor-intensive. As such, it is essential to investigate the problem of few-shot multimodal sentiment analysis. Previous works in few-shot models generally use language model prompts, which can improve performance in low-resource settings. However, the textual prompt ignores the information from other modalities. We propose Multimodal Probabilistic Fusion Prompts, which can provide diverse cues for multimodal sentiment detection. We first design a unified multimodal prompt to reduce the discrepancy in different modal prompts. To improve the robustness of our model, we then leverage multiple diverse prompts for each input and propose a probabilistic method to fuse the output predictions. Extensive experiments conducted on three datasets confirm the effectiveness of our approach.
DreamFusion has recently demonstrated the utility of a pre-trained text-to-image diffusion model to optimize Neural Radiance Fields (NeRF), achieving remarkable text-to-3D synthesis results. However, the method has two inherent limitations: (a) extremely slow optimization of NeRF and (b) low-resolution image space supervision on NeRF, leading to low-quality 3D models with a long processing time. In this paper, we address these limitations by utilizing a two-stage optimization framework. First, we obtain a coarse model using a low-resolution diffusion prior and accelerate with a sparse 3D hash grid structure. Using the coarse representation as the initialization, we further optimize a textured 3D mesh model with an efficient differentiable renderer interacting with a high-resolution latent diffusion model. Our method, dubbed Magic3D, can create high quality 3D mesh models in 40 minutes, which is 2x faster than DreamFusion (reportedly taking 1.5 hours on average), while also achieving higher resolution. User studies show 61.7% raters to prefer our approach over DreamFusion. Together with the image-conditioned generation capabilities, we provide users with new ways to control 3D synthesis, opening up new avenues to various creative applications.
Pretrained language models (PLMs) have motivated research on what kinds of knowledge these models learn. Fill-in-the-blanks problem (e.g., cloze tests) is a natural approach for gauging such knowledge. BioLAMA generates prompts for biomedical factual knowledge triples and uses the Top-k accuracy metric to evaluate different PLMs' knowledge. However, existing research has shown that such prompt-based knowledge probing methods can only probe a lower bound of knowledge. Many factors like prompt-based probing biases make the LAMA benchmark unreliable and unstable. This problem is more prominent in BioLAMA. The severe long-tailed distribution in vocabulary and large-N-M relation make the performance gap between LAMA and BioLAMA remain notable. To address these, we introduce context variance into the prompt generation and propose a new rank-change-based evaluation metric. Different from the previous known-unknown evaluation criteria, we propose the concept of "Misunderstand" in LAMA for the first time. Through experiments on 12 PLMs, our context variance prompts and Understand-Confuse-Misunderstand (UCM) metric makes BioLAMA more friendly to large-N-M relations and rare relations. We also conducted a set of control experiments to disentangle "understand" from just "read and copy".
Deploying environmental measurement stations can be a costly and time consuming procedure, especially in regions which are remote or otherwise difficult to access, such as Antarctica. Therefore, it is crucial that sensors are placed as efficiently as possible, maximising the informativeness of their measurements. Previous approaches for identifying salient placement locations typically model the data with a Gaussian process (GP). However, designing a GP covariance which captures the complex behaviour of non-stationary spatiotemporal data is a difficult task. Further, the computational cost of these models make them challenging to scale to large environmental datasets. In this work, we explore using convolutional Gaussian neural processes (ConvGNPs) to address these issues. A ConvGNP is a meta-learning model which uses a neural network to parameterise a GP predictive. Our model is data-driven, flexible, efficient, and permits gridded or off-grid input data. Using simulated surface temperature fields over Antarctica as ground truth, we show that a ConvGNP substantially outperforms a non-stationary GP baseline in terms of predictive performance. We then use the ConvGNP in a temperature sensor placement toy experiment, yielding promising results.
Sports analytics has captured increasing attention since analysis of the various data enables insights for training strategies, player evaluation, etc. In this paper, we focus on predicting what types of returning strokes will be made, and where players will move to based on previous strokes. As this problem has not been addressed to date, movement forecasting can be tackled through sequence-based and graph-based models by formulating as a sequence prediction task. However, existing sequence-based models neglect the effects of interactions between players, and graph-based models still suffer from multifaceted perspectives on the next movement. Moreover, there is no existing work on representing strategic relations among players' shot types and movements. To address these challenges, we first introduce the procedure of the Player Movements (PM) graph to exploit the structural movements of players with strategic relations. Based on the PM graph, we propose a novel Dynamic Graphs and Hierarchical Fusion for Movement Forecasting model (DyMF) with interaction style extractors to capture the mutual interactions of players themselves and between both players within a rally, and dynamic players' tactics across time. In addition, hierarchical fusion modules are designed to incorporate the style influence of both players and rally interactions. Extensive experiments show that our model empirically outperforms both sequence- and graph-based methods and demonstrate the practical usage of movement forecasting.
While current deep learning (DL)-based beamforming techniques have been proved effective in speech separation, they are often designed to process narrow-band (NB) frequencies independently which results in higher computational costs and inference times, making them unsuitable for real-world use. In this paper, we propose DL-based mel-subband spatio-temporal beamformer to perform speech separation in a car environment with reduced computation cost and inference time. As opposed to conventional subband (SB) approaches, our framework uses a mel-scale based subband selection strategy which ensures a fine-grained processing for lower frequencies where most speech formant structure is present, and coarse-grained processing for higher frequencies. In a recursive way, robust frame-level beamforming weights are determined for each speaker location/zone in a car from the estimated subband speech and noise covariance matrices. Furthermore, proposed framework also estimates and suppresses any echoes from the loudspeaker(s) by using the echo reference signals. We compare the performance of our proposed framework to several NB, SB, and full-band (FB) processing techniques in terms of speech quality and recognition metrics. Based on experimental evaluations on simulated and real-world recordings, we find that our proposed framework achieves better separation performance over all SB and FB approaches and achieves performance closer to NB processing techniques while requiring lower computing cost.
Standard frame-based algorithms fail to retrieve accurate segmentation maps in challenging real-time applications like autonomous navigation, owing to the limited dynamic range and motion blur prevalent in traditional cameras. Event cameras address these limitations by asynchronously detecting changes in per-pixel intensity to generate event streams with high temporal resolution, high dynamic range, and no motion blur. However, event camera outputs cannot be directly used to generate reliable segmentation maps as they only capture information at the pixels in motion. To augment the missing contextual information, we postulate that fusing spatially dense frames with temporally dense events can generate semantic maps with fine-grained predictions. To this end, we propose HALSIE, a hybrid approach to learning segmentation by simultaneously leveraging image and event modalities. To enable efficient learning across modalities, our proposed hybrid framework comprises two input branches, a Spiking Neural Network (SNN) branch and a standard Artificial Neural Network (ANN) branch to process event and frame data respectively, while exploiting their corresponding neural dynamics. Our hybrid network outperforms the state-of-the-art semantic segmentation benchmarks on DDD17 and MVSEC datasets and shows comparable performance on the DSEC-Semantic dataset with upto 33.23$\times$ reduction in network parameters. Further, our method shows upto 18.92$\times$ improvement in inference cost compared to existing SOTA approaches, making it suitable for resource-constrained edge applications.
Recent research in robust optimization has shown an overfitting-like phenomenon in which models trained against adversarial attacks exhibit higher robustness on the training set compared to the test set. Although previous work provided theoretical explanations for this phenomenon using a robust PAC-Bayesian bound over the adversarial test error, related algorithmic derivations are at best only loosely connected to this bound, which implies that there is still a gap between their empirical success and our understanding of adversarial robustness theory. To close this gap, in this paper we consider a different form of the robust PAC-Bayesian bound and directly minimize it with respect to the model posterior. The derivation of the optimal solution connects PAC-Bayesian learning to the geometry of the robust loss surface through a Trace of Hessian (TrH) regularizer that measures the surface flatness. In practice, we restrict the TrH regularizer to the top layer only, which results in an analytical solution to the bound whose computational cost does not depend on the network depth. Finally, we evaluate our TrH regularization approach over CIFAR-10/100 and ImageNet using Vision Transformers (ViT) and compare against baseline adversarial robustness algorithms. Experimental results show that TrH regularization leads to improved ViT robustness that either matches or surpasses previous state-of-the-art approaches while at the same time requires less memory and computational cost.
We introduce Monte Carlo Forest Search (MCFS), an offline algorithm for automatically synthesizing strong tree-search solvers for proving \emph{unsatisfiability} on given distributions, leveraging ideas from the Monte Carlo Tree Search (MCTS) algorithm that led to breakthroughs in AlphaGo. The crucial difference between proving unsatisfiability and existing applications of MCTS, is that policies produce trees rather than paths. Rather than finding a good path (solution) within a tree, the search problem becomes searching for a small proof tree within a forest of candidate proof trees. We introduce two key ideas to adapt to this setting. First, we estimate tree size with paths, via the unbiased approximation from Knuth (1975). Second, we query a strong solver at a user-defined depth rather than learning a policy across the whole tree, in order to focus our policy search on early decisions, which offer the greatest potential for reducing tree size. We then present MCFS-SAT, an implementation of MCFS for learning branching policies for solving the Boolean satisfiability (SAT) problem that required many modifications from AlphaGo. We matched or improved performance over a strong baseline on two well-known SAT distributions (\texttt{sgen}, \texttt{random}). Notably, we improved running time by 9\% on \texttt{sgen} over the \texttt{kcnfs} solver and even further over the strongest UNSAT solver from the 2021 SAT competition.
A biological system is a complex network of heterogeneous molecular entities and their interactions contributing to various biological characteristics of the system. However, current biological networks are noisy, sparse, and incomplete, limiting our ability to create a holistic view of the biological system and understand the biological phenomena. Experimental identification of such interactions is both time-consuming and expensive. With the recent advancements in high-throughput data generation and significant improvement in computational power, various computational methods have been developed to predict novel interactions in the noisy network. Recently, deep learning methods such as graph neural networks have shown their effectiveness in modeling graph-structured data and achieved good performance in biomedical interaction prediction. However, graph neural networks-based methods require human expertise and experimentation to design the appropriate complexity of the model and significantly impact the performance of the model. Furthermore, deep graph neural networks face overfitting problems and tend to be poorly calibrated with high confidence on incorrect predictions. To address these challenges, we propose Bayesian model selection for graph convolutional networks to jointly infer the most plausible number of graph convolution layers (depth) warranted by data and perform dropout regularization simultaneously. Experiments on four interaction datasets show that our proposed method achieves accurate and calibrated predictions. Our proposed method enables the graph convolutional networks to dynamically adapt their depths to accommodate an increasing number of interactions.