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EgoVIS@CVPR: What Changed and What Could Have Changed? State-Change Counterfactuals for Procedure-Aware Video Representation Learning

EgoVIS@CVPR: What Changed and What Could Have Changed? State-Change Counterfactuals for Procedure-Aware Video Representation Learning

来源:Arxiv_logoArxiv
英文摘要

Understanding a procedural activity requires modeling both how action steps transform the scene, and how evolving scene transformations can influence the sequence of action steps, even those that are accidental or erroneous. Yet, existing work on procedure-aware video representations fails to explicitly learned the state changes (scene transformations). In this work, we study procedure-aware video representation learning by incorporating state-change descriptions generated by LLMs as supervision signals for video encoders. Moreover, we generate state-change counterfactuals that simulate hypothesized failure outcomes, allowing models to learn by imagining the unseen ``What if'' scenarios. This counterfactual reasoning facilitates the model's ability to understand the cause and effect of each step in an activity. To verify the procedure awareness of our model, we conduct extensive experiments on procedure-aware tasks, including temporal action segmentation, error detection, and more. Our results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed state-change descriptions and their counterfactuals, and achieve significant improvements on multiple tasks.

Chi-Hsi Kung、Frangil Ramirez、Juhyung Ha、Yi-Ting Chen、David Crandall、Yi-Hsuan Tsai

计算技术、计算机技术

Chi-Hsi Kung,Frangil Ramirez,Juhyung Ha,Yi-Ting Chen,David Crandall,Yi-Hsuan Tsai.EgoVIS@CVPR: What Changed and What Could Have Changed? State-Change Counterfactuals for Procedure-Aware Video Representation Learning[EB/OL].(2025-05-30)[2025-06-18].https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.00101.点此复制

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