This work proposes TimeChat, a time-sensitive multimodal large language model specifically designed for long video understanding. Our model incorporates two key architectural contributions: (1) a timestamp-aware frame encoder that binds visual content with the timestamp of each frame, and (2) a sliding video Q-Former that produces a video token sequence of varying lengths to accommodate videos of various durations. Additionally, we construct an instruction-tuning dataset, encompassing 6 tasks and a total of 125K instances, to further enhance TimeChat's instruction-following performance. Experiment results across various video understanding tasks, such as dense captioning, temporal grounding, and highlight detection, demonstrate TimeChat's strong zero-shot temporal localization and reasoning capabilities. For example, it achieves +9.2 F1 score and +2.8 CIDEr on YouCook2, +5.8 HIT@1 on QVHighlights, and +27.5 R@1 (IoU=0.5) on Charades-STA, compared to state-of-the-art video large language models, holding the potential to serve as a versatile video assistant for long-form video comprehension tasks and satisfy realistic user requirements.
TimeChat: A Time-sensitive Multimodal Large Language Model for Long Video Understanding
TimeChat, a time-sensitive multimodal large language model for long video understanding, uses a timestamp-aware frame encoder and sliding video Q-Former to achieve strong zero-shot localization and reasoning performance across various tasks.
- Year
- 2023
- Venue
- CVPR 2024 1
- Authors
- 5
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2312.02051v2ARXIV-DEFAULT
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