Learning Interactions and Relationships between Movie Characters
This work addresses the challenge of understanding social dynamics in movies, which is incremental as it builds on existing datasets and methods.
The paper tackles the problem of jointly predicting interactions, relationships, and character pairs in movies by proposing neural models that use multimodal cues and weak labels, achieving encouraging performance on the MovieGraphs dataset.
Interactions between people are often governed by their relationships. On the flip side, social relationships are built upon several interactions. Two strangers are more likely to greet and introduce themselves while becoming friends over time. We are fascinated by this interplay between interactions and relationships, and believe that it is an important aspect of understanding social situations. In this work, we propose neural models to learn and jointly predict interactions, relationships, and the pair of characters that are involved. We note that interactions are informed by a mixture of visual and dialog cues, and present a multimodal architecture to extract meaningful information from them. Localizing the pair of interacting characters in video is a time-consuming process, instead, we train our model to learn from clip-level weak labels. We evaluate our models on the MovieGraphs dataset and show the impact of modalities, use of longer temporal context for predicting relationships, and achieve encouraging performance using weak labels as compared with ground-truth labels. Code is online.