We propose a new framework for understanding and representing related salient events in a video using visual semantic role labeling. We represent videos as a set of related events, wherein each event consists of a verb and multiple entities that fulfill various roles relevant to that event. To study the challenging task of semantic role labeling in videos or VidSRL, we introduce the VidSitu benchmark, a large-scale video understanding data source with 29K 10-second movie clips richly annotated with a verb and semantic-roles every 2 seconds. Entities are co-referenced across events within a movie clip and events are connected to each other via event-event relations. Clips in VidSitu are drawn from a large collection of movies ({\sim}3K) and have been chosen to be both complex ({\sim}4.2 unique verbs within a video) as well as diverse ({\sim}200 verbs have more than 100 annotations each). We provide a comprehensive analysis of the dataset in comparison to other publicly available video understanding benchmarks, several illustrative baselines and evaluate a range of standard video recognition models. Our code and dataset is available at vidsitu.org.
Visual Semantic Role Labeling for Video Understanding
A framework for visual semantic role labeling in videos using the VidSitu benchmark captures events and their relations with detailed annotations.
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- Year
- 2021
- Venue
- CVPR 2021 1
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- 5
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- arxiv.org/abs/2104.00990ARXIV-DEFAULT
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