Joint Visual Grounding with Language Scene Graphs
This work solves the visual grounding problem for AI systems that need to interpret complex referring expressions in images, offering an incremental improvement over existing methods.
The paper tackles the problem of visual grounding by addressing the lack of annotations for contextual objects and relationships, proposing a method that uses language scene graphs to jointly ground referents and contexts, resulting in improved performance and interpretability on three benchmarks.
Visual grounding is a task to ground referring expressions in images, e.g., localize "the white truck in front of the yellow one". To resolve this task fundamentally, the model should first find out the contextual objects (e.g., the "yellow" truck) and then exploit them to disambiguate the referent from other similar objects by using the attributes and relationships (e.g., "white", "yellow", "in front of"). However, due to the lack of annotations on contextual objects and their relationships, existing methods degenerate the above joint grounding process into a holistic association between the expression and regions, thus suffering from unsatisfactory performance and limited interpretability. In this paper, we alleviate the missing-annotation problem and enable the joint reasoning by leveraging the language scene graph which covers both labeled referent and unlabeled contexts (other objects, attributes, and relationships). Specifically, the language scene graph is a graphical representation where the nodes are objects with attributes and the edges are relationships. We construct a factor graph based on it and then perform marginalization over the graph, such that we can ground both referent and contexts on corresponding image regions to achieve the joint visual grounding (JVG). Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed approach is effective and interpretable, e.g., on three benchmarks, it outperforms the state-of-the-art methods while offers a complete grounding of all the objects mentioned in the referring expression.