CVJun 14, 2024

GPT-4o: Visual perception performance of multimodal large language models in piglet activity understanding

arXiv:2406.09781v130 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the complex, subjective task of animal behavior labeling in livestock research, though it appears incremental as it applies existing multimodal LLMs to a new domain.

This study evaluated the visual perception capabilities of four multimodal large language models (Video-LLaMA, MiniGPT4-Video, Video-Chat2, and GPT-4o) for piglet activity recognition in livestock scenarios, finding that GPT-4o showed outstanding performance with significantly better semantic correspondence and time perception in close-up video clips compared to full-shot clips.

Animal ethology is an crucial aspect of animal research, and animal behavior labeling is the foundation for studying animal behavior. This process typically involves labeling video clips with behavioral semantic tags, a task that is complex, subjective, and multimodal. With the rapid development of multimodal large language models(LLMs), new application have emerged for animal behavior understanding tasks in livestock scenarios. This study evaluates the visual perception capabilities of multimodal LLMs in animal activity recognition. To achieve this, we created piglet test data comprising close-up video clips of individual piglets and annotated full-shot video clips. These data were used to assess the performance of four multimodal LLMs-Video-LLaMA, MiniGPT4-Video, Video-Chat2, and GPT-4 omni (GPT-4o)-in piglet activity understanding. Through comprehensive evaluation across five dimensions, including counting, actor referring, semantic correspondence, time perception, and robustness, we found that while current multimodal LLMs require improvement in semantic correspondence and time perception, they have initially demonstrated visual perception capabilities for animal activity recognition. Notably, GPT-4o showed outstanding performance, with Video-Chat2 and GPT-4o exhibiting significantly better semantic correspondence and time perception in close-up video clips compared to full-shot clips. The initial evaluation experiments in this study validate the potential of multimodal large language models in livestock scene video understanding and provide new directions and references for future research on animal behavior video understanding. Furthermore, by deeply exploring the influence of visual prompts on multimodal large language models, we expect to enhance the accuracy and efficiency of animal behavior recognition in livestock scenarios through human visual processing methods.

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