CVApr 14

Retrieving to Recover: Towards Incomplete Audio-Visual Question Answering via Semantic-consistent Purification

arXiv:2604.1069550.1h-index: 5
Predicted impact top 61% in CV · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For AVQA systems facing real-world data interruptions, this work provides a more robust method to handle missing modalities without hallucinations.

The paper tackles incomplete audio-visual question answering by shifting from generative imputation to retrieval-based recovery, achieving significant performance improvements in modal-incomplete scenarios.

Recent Audio-Visual Question Answering (AVQA) methods have advanced significantly. However, most AVQA methods lack effective mechanisms for handling missing modalities, suffering from severe performance degradation in real-world scenarios with data interruptions. Furthermore, prevailing methods for handling missing modalities predominantly rely on generative imputation to synthesize missing features. While partially effective, these methods tend to capture inter-modal commonalities but struggle to acquire unique, modality-specific knowledge within the missing data, leading to hallucinations and compromised reasoning accuracy. To tackle these challenges, we propose R$^{2}$ScP, a novel framework that shifts the paradigm of missing modality handling from traditional generative imputation to retrieval-based recovery. Specifically, we leverage cross-modal retrieval via unified semantic embeddings to acquire missing domain-specific knowledge. To maximize semantic restoration, we introduce a context-aware adaptive purification mechanism that eliminates latent semantic noise within the retrieved data. Additionally, we employ a two-stage training strategy to explicitly model the semantic relationships between knowledge from different sources. Extensive experiments demonstrate that R$^{2}$ScP significantly improves AVQA and enhances robustness in modal-incomplete scenarios.

Foundations

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