DnS: Distill-and-Select for Efficient and Accurate Video Indexing and Retrieval
This addresses the need for efficient and accurate video indexing and retrieval in large datasets, offering a novel trade-off solution that is incremental in improving existing methods.
The paper tackles the problem of achieving high performance and computational efficiency in large-scale video retrieval by proposing a Knowledge Distillation framework called Distill-and-Select (DnS), which learns multiple student networks for different trade-offs and a selector network to direct samples, resulting in state-of-the-art performance in some cases with up to 20 times faster speed and 240 times less storage space.
In this paper, we address the problem of high performance and computationally efficient content-based video retrieval in large-scale datasets. Current methods typically propose either: (i) fine-grained approaches employing spatio-temporal representations and similarity calculations, achieving high performance at a high computational cost or (ii) coarse-grained approaches representing/indexing videos as global vectors, where the spatio-temporal structure is lost, providing low performance but also having low computational cost. In this work, we propose a Knowledge Distillation framework, called Distill-and-Select (DnS), that starting from a well-performing fine-grained Teacher Network learns: a) Student Networks at different retrieval performance and computational efficiency trade-offs and b) a Selector Network that at test time rapidly directs samples to the appropriate student to maintain both high retrieval performance and high computational efficiency. We train several students with different architectures and arrive at different trade-offs of performance and efficiency, i.e., speed and storage requirements, including fine-grained students that store/index videos using binary representations. Importantly, the proposed scheme allows Knowledge Distillation in large, unlabelled datasets -- this leads to good students. We evaluate DnS on five public datasets on three different video retrieval tasks and demonstrate a) that our students achieve state-of-the-art performance in several cases and b) that the DnS framework provides an excellent trade-off between retrieval performance, computational speed, and storage space. In specific configurations, the proposed method achieves similar mAP with the teacher but is 20 times faster and requires 240 times less storage space. The collected dataset and implementation are publicly available: https://github.com/mever-team/distill-and-select.