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This paper proposes a self-supervised objective for learning representations that localize objects under occlusion - a property known as object permanence. A central question is the choice of learning signal in cases of total occlusion. Rather than directly supervising the locations of invisible objects, we propose a self-supervised objective that requires neither human annotation, nor assumptions about object dynamics. We show that object permanence can emerge by optimizing for temporal coherence of memory: we fit a Markov walk along a space-time graph of memories, where the states in each time step are non-Markovian features from a sequence encoder. This leads to a memory representation that stores occluded objects and predicts their motion, to better localize them. The resulting model outperforms existing approaches on several datasets of increasing complexity and realism, despite requiring minimal supervision, and hence being broadly applicable.
Author Information
Pavel Tokmakov (Toyota Research Institute)
Allan Jabri (UC Berkeley)
Jie Li (Toyota Research Institute)
Adrien Gaidon (Toyota Research Institute)
Related Events (a corresponding poster, oral, or spotlight)
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2022 Poster: Object Permanence Emerges in a Random Walk along Memory »
Thu. Jul 21st through Fri the 22nd Room Hall E #212
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