T4P: Test-Time Training of Trajectory Prediction via Masked Autoencoder and Actor-specific Token Memory
This addresses the problem of distribution shifts in trajectory prediction for autonomous driving systems, offering an incremental improvement over existing online learning approaches.
The paper tackles unreliable trajectory predictions under distribution shifts by introducing a test-time training method using a masked autoencoder and actor-specific token memory, achieving superior prediction accuracy and computational efficiency over state-of-the-art online learning methods across multiple datasets.
Trajectory prediction is a challenging problem that requires considering interactions among multiple actors and the surrounding environment. While data-driven approaches have been used to address this complex problem, they suffer from unreliable predictions under distribution shifts during test time. Accordingly, several online learning methods have been proposed using regression loss from the ground truth of observed data leveraging the auto-labeling nature of trajectory prediction task. We mainly tackle the following two issues. First, previous works underfit and overfit as they only optimize the last layer of the motion decoder. To this end, we employ the masked autoencoder (MAE) for representation learning to encourage complex interaction modeling in shifted test distribution for updating deeper layers. Second, utilizing the sequential nature of driving data, we propose an actor-specific token memory that enables the test-time learning of actor-wise motion characteristics. Our proposed method has been validated across various challenging cross-dataset distribution shift scenarios including nuScenes, Lyft, Waymo, and Interaction. Our method surpasses the performance of existing state-of-the-art online learning methods in terms of both prediction accuracy and computational efficiency. The code is available at https://github.com/daeheepark/T4P.