Optimizing Factorized Encoder Models: Time and Memory Reduction for Scalable and Efficient Action Recognition
Shreyank N Gowda*, Anurag Arnab, Jonathan Huang
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Abstract
"In this paper, we address the challenges posed by the substantial training time and memory consumption associated with video transformers, focusing on the ViViT (Video Vision Transformer) model, in particular the Factorised Encoder version, as our baseline for action recognition tasks. The factorised encoder variant follows the late-fusion approach that is adopted by many state of the art approaches. Despite standing out for its favorable speed/accuracy tradeoffs among the different variants of ViViT, its considerable training time and memory requirements still pose a significant barrier to entry. Our method is designed to lower this barrier and is based on the idea of freezing the spatial transformer during training. This leads to a low accuracy model if naively done. But we show that by (1) appropriately initializing the temporal transformer (a module responsible for processing temporal information) (2) introducing a compact adapter model connecting frozen spatial representations (a module that selectively focuses on regions of the input image) to the temporal transformer, we can enjoy the benefits of freezing the spatial transformer without sacrificing accuracy. Through extensive experimentation over 6 benchmarks, we demonstrate that our proposed training strategy significantly reduces training costs (by ) and memory consumption while maintaining or slightly improving performance by up to 1.79% compared to the baseline model. Our approach additionally unlocks the capability to utilize larger image transformer models as our spatial transformer and access more frames with the same memory consumption. We also show the generalization of this approach to other factorized encoder models. The advancements made in this work have the potential to advance research in the video understanding domain and provide valuable insights for researchers and practitioners with limited resources, paving the way for more efficient and scalable alternatives in the action recognition field."
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