Aodong Chen

h-index10
2papers

2 Papers

76.8CVJun 4Code
StoryVideoQA: Scaling Deep Video Understanding with a Large-Scale, Multi-Genre and Auto-Generated Dataset

Zhengqian Wu, Zhixian Liu, Aodong Chen et al.

Video question answering (VideoQA) aims to answer questions about given videos. While existing approaches excel on factoid VideoQA, they struggle with deep video understanding (DVU), which requires the comprehension of complex storylines. This challenge arises from the inherent long-range video content, multi-faceted question types, and instance-level story elements, all of which constrain the scale and diversity of manually constructed DVU datasets. These difficulties constrain the scale and diversity of manually-constructed DVU dataset. To address these, we previously introduced StoryMind to automatically construct DVU datasets with balanced fine-grained topics. Though it can generate high-quality question-answer pairs (QAs) for TV series, it suffers significant performance degradation when handling longer and more complex movies. In this paper, we further design StoryMindv2, an enhanced multi-agent collaboration framework to generate high-quality DVU datasets for both TV series and movies. By integrating a novel supervisor-guided generation mechanism and a refined multi-reviewer voting strategy, the framework is utilized to construct StoryVideoQA, the largest DVU dataset to date, featuring over 363K QAs on 393.2 hours diverse story videos including TV series (avg. 1,635 seconds) and movies (avg. 7,878 seconds). Comprehensive evaluations of 20 state-of-the-art VideoQA methods on this large-scale benchmark reveal that they cannot fully maintain long-range character associations or construct a coherent understanding of complex storylines. To bridge this gap, we propose PlotTree, a novel video understanding agent, re-organizing long-range video content into a hierarchical plot structure, enabling efficient storyline reasoning on StoryVideoQA. Project page: https://github.com/nercms-mmap/StoryVideoQA/

DCDec 16, 2023Code
Opara: Exploiting Operator Parallelism for Expediting DNN Inference on GPUs

Aodong Chen, Fei Xu, Li Han et al.

GPUs have become the \emph{defacto} hardware devices for accelerating Deep Neural Network (DNN) inference workloads. However, the conventional \emph{sequential execution mode of DNN operators} in mainstream deep learning frameworks cannot fully utilize GPU resources, even with the operator fusion enabled, due to the increasing complexity of model structures and a greater diversity of operators. Moreover, the \emph{inadequate operator launch order} in parallelized execution scenarios can lead to GPU resource wastage and unexpected performance interference among operators. In this paper, we propose \emph{Opara}, a resource- and interference-aware DNN \underline{Op}erator \underline{para}llel scheduling framework to accelerate DNN inference on GPUs. Specifically, \emph{Opara} first employs \texttt{CUDA Streams} and \texttt{CUDA Graph} to \emph{parallelize} the execution of multiple operators automatically. To further expedite DNN inference, \emph{Opara} leverages the resource demands of operators to judiciously adjust the operator launch order on GPUs, overlapping the execution of compute-intensive and memory-intensive operators. We implement and open source a prototype of \emph{Opara} based on PyTorch in a \emph{non-intrusive} manner. Extensive prototype experiments with representative DNN and Transformer-based models demonstrate that \emph{Opara} outperforms the default sequential \texttt{CUDA Graph} in PyTorch and the state-of-the-art operator parallelism systems by up to $1.68\times$ and $1.29\times$, respectively, yet with acceptable runtime overhead.