Article
Question-Agnostic Attention for Visual Question Answering
2020 25th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR)
(2021)
Abstract
Visual Question Answering (VQA) models employ attention mechanisms to discover image locations that are most relevant for answering a specific question. For this purpose, several multimodal fusion strategies have been proposed, ranging from relatively simple operations (e.g. linear sum) to more complex ones (e.g. Block [1]). The resulting multimodal representations define an intermediate feature space for capturing the interplay between visual and semantic features, that is helpful in selectively focusing on image content. In this paper, we propose a question-agnostic attention mechanism that is complementary to the existing question-dependent attention mechanisms. Our proposed model parses object instances to obtain an 'object map' and applies this map on the visual features to generate Question-Agnostic Attention (QAA) features. In contrast to question-dependent attention approaches that are learned end-to-end, the proposed QAA does not involve question-specific training, and can be easily included in almost any existing VQA model as a generic light-weight pre-processing step, thereby adding minimal computation overhead for training. Further, when used in complement with the question-dependent attention, the QAA allows the model to focus on the regions containing objects that might have been overlooked by the learned attention representation. Through extensive evaluation on VQAv1, VQAv2 and TDIUC datasets, we show that incorporating complementary QAA allows state-of-the-art VQA models to perform better, and provides significant boost to simplistic VQA models, enabling them to performance on par with highly sophisticated fusion strategies.
Disciplines
Publication Date
2021
DOI
10.1109/ICPR48806.2021.9413330
Citation Information
M. Farazi, S. Khan and N. Barnes, "Question-agnostic attention for visual question answering," 2020 25th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR), 2021, pp. 3542-3549, doi: 10.1109/ICPR48806.2021.9413330.