CVAIMMSep 28, 2022

CALIP: Zero-Shot Enhancement of CLIP with Parameter-free Attention

arXiv:2209.14169v2184 citationsh-index: 37
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This provides a free-lunch enhancement for CLIP users, enabling better zero-shot alignment without extra deployment costs, though it is incremental as it builds directly on CLIP.

The paper tackles the problem of improving CLIP's zero-shot classification performance without additional training or data by introducing CALIP, a parameter-free attention module that enhances cross-modal interaction, achieving consistent performance gains across 14 datasets for 2D image and 3D point cloud classification.

Contrastive Language-Image Pre-training (CLIP) has been shown to learn visual representations with great transferability, which achieves promising accuracy for zero-shot classification. To further improve its downstream performance, existing works propose additional learnable modules upon CLIP and fine-tune them by few-shot training sets. However, the resulting extra training cost and data requirement severely hinder the efficiency for model deployment and knowledge transfer. In this paper, we introduce a free-lunch enhancement method, CALIP, to boost CLIP's zero-shot performance via a parameter-free Attention module. Specifically, we guide visual and textual representations to interact with each other and explore cross-modal informative features via attention. As the pre-training has largely reduced the embedding distances between two modalities, we discard all learnable parameters in the attention and bidirectionally update the multi-modal features, enabling the whole process to be parameter-free and training-free. In this way, the images are blended with textual-aware signals and the text representations become visual-guided for better adaptive zero-shot alignment. We evaluate CALIP on various benchmarks of 14 datasets for both 2D image and 3D point cloud few-shot classification, showing consistent zero-shot performance improvement over CLIP. Based on that, we further insert a small number of linear layers in CALIP's attention module and verify our robustness under the few-shot settings, which also achieves leading performance compared to existing methods. Those extensive experiments demonstrate the superiority of our approach for efficient enhancement of CLIP.

Code Implementations1 repo
Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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