DVCFlow: Modeling Information Flow Towards Human-like Video Captioning
This addresses the challenge of generating human-like multi-sentence descriptions for videos, which is incremental as it builds on existing methods by adding cross-modal alignment.
The paper tackled the problem of dense video captioning by modeling information flow to improve visual consistency and coherence, resulting in significantly outperforming baselines on ActivityNet Captions and YouCookII datasets.
Dense video captioning (DVC) aims to generate multi-sentence descriptions to elucidate the multiple events in the video, which is challenging and demands visual consistency, discoursal coherence, and linguistic diversity. Existing methods mainly generate captions from individual video segments, lacking adaptation to the global visual context and progressive alignment between the fast-evolved visual content and textual descriptions, which results in redundant and spliced descriptions. In this paper, we introduce the concept of information flow to model the progressive information changing across video sequence and captions. By designing a Cross-modal Information Flow Alignment mechanism, the visual and textual information flows are captured and aligned, which endows the captioning process with richer context and dynamics on event/topic evolution. Based on the Cross-modal Information Flow Alignment module, we further put forward DVCFlow framework, which consists of a Global-local Visual Encoder to capture both global features and local features for each video segment, and a pre-trained Caption Generator to produce captions. Extensive experiments on the popular ActivityNet Captions and YouCookII datasets demonstrate that our method significantly outperforms competitive baselines, and generates more human-like text according to subject and objective tests.