This work aims to temporally localize events that are both audible and visible in video. Previous methods mainly focused on temporal modeling of events with simple fusion of audio and… Click to show full abstract
This work aims to temporally localize events that are both audible and visible in video. Previous methods mainly focused on temporal modeling of events with simple fusion of audio and visual features. In natural scenes, a video records not only the events of interest but also ambient acoustic noise and visual background, resulting in redundant information in the raw audio and visual features. Thus, direct fusion of the two features often causes false localization of the events. In this paper, we propose a co-attention model to exploit the spatial and semantic correlations between the audio and visual features, which helps guide the extraction of discriminative features for better event localization. Our assumption is that in an audio-visual event, shared semantic information between audio and visual features exists and can be extracted by attention learning. Specifically, the proposed co-attention model is composed of a co-spatial attention module and a co-semantic attention module that are used to model the spatial and semantic correlations, respectively. The proposed co-attention model can be applied to various event localization tasks, such as cross-modality localization and multimodal event localization. Experiments on the public audio-visual event (AVE) dataset demonstrate that the proposed method achieves state-of-the-art performance by learning spatial and semantic co-attention.
               
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