Curriculum Audiovisual Learning
This work addresses the challenge of audiovisual learning for sound localization and separation, which is incremental in its curriculum learning approach.
The paper tackles the problem of associating sound with its visual source in complex scenes without annotated data, achieving significant improvements in sound localization and comparable performance in sound separation without external visual supervision.
Associating sound and its producer in complex audiovisual scene is a challenging task, especially when we are lack of annotated training data. In this paper, we present a flexible audiovisual model that introduces a soft-clustering module as the audio and visual content detector, and regards the pervasive property of audiovisual concurrency as the latent supervision for inferring the correlation among detected contents. To ease the difficulty of audiovisual learning, we propose a novel curriculum learning strategy that trains the model from simple to complex scene. We show that such ordered learning procedure rewards the model the merits of easy training and fast convergence. Meanwhile, our audiovisual model can also provide effective unimodal representation and cross-modal alignment performance. We further deploy the well-trained model into practical audiovisual sound localization and separation task. We show that our localization model significantly outperforms existing methods, based on which we show comparable performance in sound separation without referring external visual supervision. Our video demo can be found at https://youtu.be/kuClfGG0cFU.