We present a simple, self-supervised approach to the Tracking Any Point (TAP) problem. We train a global matching transformer to find cycle consistent tracks through video via contrastive random walks, using the transformer's attention-based global matching to define the transition matrices for a random walk on a space-time graph. The ability to perform "all pairs" comparisons between points allows the model to obtain high spatial precision and to obtain a strong contrastive learning signal, while avoiding many of the complexities of recent approaches (such as coarse-to-fine matching). To do this, we propose a number of design decisions that allow global matching architectures to be trained through self-supervision using cycle consistency. For example, we identify that transformer-based methods are sensitive to shortcut solutions, and propose a data augmentation scheme to address them. Our method achieves strong performance on the TapVid benchmarks, outperforming previous self-supervised tracking methods, such as DIFT, and is competitive with several supervised methods.
Self-Supervised Any-Point Tracking by Contrastive Random Walks
A self-supervised method using a global matching transformer and contrastive random walks achieves strong performance in point tracking, surpassing other self-supervised methods and being competitive with supervised ones.
- Year
- 2024
- Venue
- arXiv 2024
- Authors
- 2
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2409.16288ARXIV-DEFAULT
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