CVJul 9, 2025

Go to Zero: Towards Zero-shot Motion Generation with Million-scale Data

arXiv:2507.07095v156 citationsh-index: 8Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of limited training data for zero-shot motion generation in computer vision and robotics, representing a significant but incremental step.

The paper tackles the problem of zero-shot generalization in text-to-motion generation by introducing MotionMillion, a dataset with over 2 million motion sequences, and a benchmark for evaluation, achieving strong generalization to out-of-domain motions.

Generating diverse and natural human motion sequences based on textual descriptions constitutes a fundamental and challenging research area within the domains of computer vision, graphics, and robotics. Despite significant advancements in this field, current methodologies often face challenges regarding zero-shot generalization capabilities, largely attributable to the limited size of training datasets. Moreover, the lack of a comprehensive evaluation framework impedes the advancement of this task by failing to identify directions for improvement. In this work, we aim to push text-to-motion into a new era, that is, to achieve the generalization ability of zero-shot. To this end, firstly, we develop an efficient annotation pipeline and introduce MotionMillion-the largest human motion dataset to date, featuring over 2,000 hours and 2 million high-quality motion sequences. Additionally, we propose MotionMillion-Eval, the most comprehensive benchmark for evaluating zero-shot motion generation. Leveraging a scalable architecture, we scale our model to 7B parameters and validate its performance on MotionMillion-Eval. Our results demonstrate strong generalization to out-of-domain and complex compositional motions, marking a significant step toward zero-shot human motion generation. The code is available at https://github.com/VankouF/MotionMillion-Codes.

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