Ee Yeo Keat

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2papers

2 Papers

CVMar 19, 2025Code
Neuro Symbolic Knowledge Reasoning for Procedural Video Question Answering

Thanh-Son Nguyen, Hong Yang, Tzeh Yuan Neoh et al.

We introduce PKR-QA (Procedural Knowledge Reasoning Question Answering), a new benchmark for question answering over procedural tasks that require structured reasoning. PKR-QA is constructed semi-automatically using a procedural knowledge graph (PKG), which encodes task-specific knowledge across diverse domains. The PKG is built by curating and linking information from the COIN instructional video dataset and the ontology, enriched with commonsense knowledge from ConceptNet and structured outputs from Large Language Models (LLMs), followed by manual verification. To generate question-answer pairs, we design graph traversal templates where each template is applied systematically over PKG. To enable interpretable reasoning, we propose a neurosymbolic approach called Knowledge Module Learning (KML), which learns procedural relations via neural modules and composes them for structured reasoning with LLMs. Experiments demonstrate that this paradigm improves reasoning performance on PKR-QA and enables step-by-step reasoning traces that facilitate interpretability. Code and dataset will be released soon https://github.com/LUNAProject22/KML.

CVJan 23, 2024
Training-Free Action Recognition and Goal Inference with Dynamic Frame Selection

Ee Yeo Keat, Zhang Hao, Alexander Matyasko et al.

We introduce VidTFS, a Training-free, open-vocabulary video goal and action inference framework that combines the frozen vision foundational model (VFM) and large language model (LLM) with a novel dynamic Frame Selection module. Our experiments demonstrate that the proposed frame selection module improves the performance of the framework significantly. We validate the performance of the proposed VidTFS on four widely used video datasets, including CrossTask, COIN, UCF101, and ActivityNet, covering goal inference and action recognition tasks under open-vocabulary settings without requiring any training or fine-tuning. The results show that VidTFS outperforms pretrained and instruction-tuned multimodal language models that directly stack LLM and VFM for downstream video inference tasks. Our VidTFS with its adaptability shows the future potential for generalizing to new training-free video inference tasks.