DC-VLAQ: Query-Residual Aggregation for Robust Visual Place Recognition
This work addresses the problem of robust visual place recognition for applications like robotics and autonomous navigation, representing an incremental improvement by combining existing models with novel aggregation techniques.
The paper tackled the challenge of learning robust global representations for visual place recognition under viewpoint changes, illumination variations, and domain shifts by proposing DC-VLAQ, which integrates complementary visual foundation models and a query-residual aggregation scheme, achieving state-of-the-art performance on benchmarks like Pitts30k and Tokyo24/7.
One of the central challenges in visual place recognition (VPR) is learning a robust global representation that remains discriminative under large viewpoint changes, illumination variations, and severe domain shifts. While visual foundation models (VFMs) provide strong local features, most existing methods rely on a single model, overlooking the complementary cues offered by different VFMs. However, exploiting such complementary information inevitably alters token distributions, which challenges the stability of existing query-based global aggregation schemes. To address these challenges, we propose DC-VLAQ, a representation-centric framework that integrates the fusion of complementary VFMs and robust global aggregation. Specifically, we first introduce a lightweight residual-guided complementary fusion that anchors representations in the DINOv2 feature space while injecting complementary semantics from CLIP through a learned residual correction. In addition, we propose the Vector of Local Aggregated Queries (VLAQ), a query--residual global aggregation scheme that encodes local tokens by their residual responses to learnable queries, resulting in improved stability and the preservation of fine-grained discriminative cues. Extensive experiments on standard VPR benchmarks, including Pitts30k, Tokyo24/7, MSLS, Nordland, SPED, and AmsterTime, demonstrate that DC-VLAQ consistently outperforms strong baselines and achieves state-of-the-art performance, particularly under challenging domain shifts and long-term appearance changes.