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The connection between our 3D surroundings and the descriptive language that characterizes them would be well-suited for localizing and generating human motion in context but for one problem. The complexity introduced by multiple modalities makes capturing this connection challenging with a fixed set of descriptors. Specifically, closed vocabulary scene encoders, which require learning text-scene associations from scratch, have been favored in the literature, often resulting in inaccurate motion grounding. In this paper, we propose a method that integrates an open vocabulary scene encoder into the architecture, establishing a robust connection between text and scene. Our two-step approach starts with pretraining the scene encoder through knowledge distillation from an existing open vocabulary semantic image segmentation model, ensuring a shared text-scene feature space. Subsequently, the scene encoder is fine-tuned for conditional motion generation, incorporating two novel regularization losses that regress the category and size of the goal object. Our methodology achieves up to a 30% reduction in the goal object distance metric compared to the prior state-of-the-art baseline model on the HUMANISE dataset. This improvement is demonstrated through evaluations conducted using three implementations of our framework and a perceptual study. Additionally, our method is designed to seamlessly accommodate future 2D segmentation methods that provide per-pixel text-aligned features for distillation.
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Zoltán Á. Milacski
Carnegie Mellon University
Koichiro Niinuma
Fujitsu (United States)
Ryosuke Kawamura
Keio University
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Milacski et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e700f4b6db64358767b6da — DOI: https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2405.18438
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