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Harm de Vries

Alumni

Publications

FiLM: Visual Reasoning with a General Conditioning Layer
We introduce a general-purpose conditioning method for neural networks called FiLM: Feature-wise Linear Modulation. FiLM layers influence ne… (see more)ural network computation via a simple, feature-wise affine transformation based on conditioning information. We show that FiLM layers are highly effective for visual reasoning - answering image-related questions which require a multi-step, high-level process - a task which has proven difficult for standard deep learning methods that do not explicitly model reasoning. Specifically, we show on visual reasoning tasks that FiLM layers 1) halve state-of-the-art error for the CLEVR benchmark, 2) modulate features in a coherent manner, 3) are robust to ablations and architectural modifications, and 4) generalize well to challenging, new data from few examples or even zero-shot.
End-to-end optimization of goal-driven and visually grounded dialogue systems
Jérémie Mary
Bilal Piot
Olivier Pietquin
End-to-end design of dialogue systems has recently become a popular research topic thanks to powerful tools such as encoder-decoder architec… (see more)tures for sequence-to-sequence learning. Yet, most current approaches cast human-machine dialogue management as a supervised learning problem, aiming at predicting the next utterance of a participant given the full history of the dialogue. This vision is too simplistic to render the intrinsic planning problem inherent to dialogue as well as its grounded nature , making the context of a dialogue larger than the sole history. This is why only chitchat and question answering tasks have been addressed so far using end-to-end architectures. In this paper, we introduce a Deep Reinforcement Learning method to optimize visually grounded task-oriented dialogues , based on the policy gradient algorithm. This approach is tested on a dataset of 120k dialogues collected through Mechanical Turk and provides encouraging results at solving both the problem of generating natural dialogues and the task of discovering a specific object in a complex picture.
GuessWhat?! Visual Object Discovery through Multi-modal Dialogue
We introduce GuessWhat?!, a two-player guessing game as a testbed for research on the interplay of computer vision and dialogue systems. The… (see more) goal of the game is to locate an unknown object in a rich image scene by asking a sequence of questions. Higher-level image understanding, like spatial reasoning and language grounding, is required to solve the proposed task. Our key contribution is the collection of a large-scale dataset consisting of 150K human-played games with a total of 800K visual question-answer pairs on 66K images. We explain our design decisions in collecting the dataset and introduce the oracle and questioner tasks that are associated with the two players of the game. We prototyped deep learning models to establish initial baselines of the introduced tasks.
Learning Visual Reasoning Without Strong Priors
Achieving artificial visual reasoning - the ability to answer image-related questions which require a multi-step, high-level process - is an… (see more) important step towards artificial general intelligence. This multi-modal task requires learning a question-dependent, structured reasoning process over images from language. Standard deep learning approaches tend to exploit biases in the data rather than learn this underlying structure, while leading methods learn to visually reason successfully but are hand-crafted for reasoning. We show that a general-purpose, Conditional Batch Normalization approach achieves state-of-the-art results on the CLEVR Visual Reasoning benchmark with a 2.4% error rate. We outperform the next best end-to-end method (4.5%) and even methods that use extra supervision (3.1%). We probe our model to shed light on how it reasons, showing it has learned a question-dependent, multi-step process. Previous work has operated under the assumption that visual reasoning calls for a specialized architecture, but we show that a general architecture with proper conditioning can learn to visually reason effectively.
Modulating early visual processing by language
It is commonly assumed that language refers to high-level visual concepts while leaving low-level visual processing unaffected. This view do… (see more)minates the current literature in computational models for language-vision tasks, where visual and linguistic input are mostly processed independently before being fused into a single representation. In this paper, we deviate from this classic pipeline and propose to modulate the \emph{entire visual processing} by linguistic input. Specifically, we condition the batch normalization parameters of a pretrained residual network (ResNet) on a language embedding. This approach, which we call MOdulated RESnet (\MRN), significantly improves strong baselines on two visual question answering tasks. Our ablation study shows that modulating from the early stages of the visual processing is beneficial.
Modulating early visual processing by language
It is commonly assumed that language refers to high-level visual concepts while leaving low-level visual processing unaffected. This view do… (see more)minates the current literature in computational models for language-vision tasks, where visual and linguistic input are mostly processed independently before being fused into a single representation. In this paper, we deviate from this classic pipeline and propose to modulate the \emph{entire visual processing} by linguistic input. Specifically, we condition the batch normalization parameters of a pretrained residual network (ResNet) on a language embedding. This approach, which we call MOdulated RESnet (\MRN), significantly improves strong baselines on two visual question answering tasks. Our ablation study shows that modulating from the early stages of the visual processing is beneficial.
Theano: A Python framework for fast computation of mathematical expressions
Rami Al-rfou'
Amjad Almahairi
Christof Angermüller
Frédéric Bastien
Justin S. Bayer
A. Belikov
A. Belopolsky
J. Bergstra
Josh Bleecher Snyder
Paul F. Christiano
Marc-Alexandre Côté
Myriam Côté
Julien Demouth
Sander Dieleman
M'elanie Ducoffe
Ziye Fan
Mathieu Germain
Ian J. Goodfellow
Matthew Graham
Balázs Hidasi
Arjun Jain
S'ebastien Jean
Kai Jia
Mikhail V. Korobov
Vivek Kulkarni
Pascal Lamblin
Eric P. Larsen
S. Lee
Simon-mark Lefrancois
J. Livezey
Cory R. Lorenz
Jeremiah L. Lowin
Qianli M. Ma
R. McGibbon
Mehdi Mirza
Alberto Orlandi
Colin Raffel
Daniel Renshaw
Matthew David Rocklin
Markus Dr. Roth
Peter Sadowski
John Salvatier
Jan Schlüter
John D. Schulman
Gabriel Schwartz
Iulian V. Serban
Samira Shabanian
Sigurd Spieckermann
S. Subramanyam
Gijs van Tulder
Joseph P. Turian
Sebastian Urban
Dustin J. Webb
M. Willson
Lijun Xue
Theano is a Python library that allows to define, optimize, and evaluate mathematical expressions involving multi-dimensional arrays efficie… (see more)ntly. Since its introduction, it has been one of the most used CPU and GPU mathematical compilers - especially in the machine learning community - and has shown steady performance improvements. Theano is being actively and continuously developed since 2008, multiple frameworks have been built on top of it and it has been used to produce many state-of-the-art machine learning models. The present article is structured as follows. Section I provides an overview of the Theano software and its community. Section II presents the principal features of Theano and how to use them, and compares them with other similar projects. Section III focuses on recently-introduced functionalities and improvements. Section IV compares the performance of Theano against Torch7 and TensorFlow on several machine learning models. Section V discusses current limitations of Theano and potential ways of improving it.
Theano: A Python framework for fast computation of mathematical expressions
Rami Al-rfou'
Amjad Almahairi
Christof Angermüller
Frédéric Bastien
Justin S. Bayer
A. Belikov
A. Belopolsky
Josh Bleecher Snyder
Paul F. Christiano
Marc-Alexandre Côté
Myriam Côté
Julien Demouth
Sander Dieleman
M'elanie Ducoffe
Ziye Fan
Mathieu Germain
Ian G Goodfellow
Matthew Graham
Balázs Hidasi
Arjun Jain
Kai Jia
Mikhail V. Korobov
Vivek Kulkarni
Pascal Lamblin
Eric Larsen
S. Lee
Simon-mark Lefrancois
J. Livezey
Cory R. Lorenz
Jeremiah L. Lowin
Qianli M. Ma
R. McGibbon
Mehdi Mirza
Alberto Orlandi
Colin Raffel
Daniel Renshaw
Matthew David Rocklin
Markus Dr. Roth
Peter Sadowski
John Salvatier
Jan Schlüter
John D. Schulman
Gabriel Schwartz
Iulian V. Serban
Samira Shabanian
Sigurd Spieckermann
S. Subramanyam
Gijs van Tulder
Sebastian Urban
Dustin J. Webb
M. Willson
Lijun Xue
Theano is a Python library that allows to define, optimize, and evaluate mathematical expressions involving multi-dimensional arrays efficie… (see more)ntly. Since its introduction, it has been one of the most used CPU and GPU mathematical compilers - especially in the machine learning community - and has shown steady performance improvements. Theano is being actively and continuously developed since 2008, multiple frameworks have been built on top of it and it has been used to produce many state-of-the-art machine learning models. The present article is structured as follows. Section I provides an overview of the Theano software and its community. Section II presents the principal features of Theano and how to use them, and compares them with other similar projects. Section III focuses on recently-introduced functionalities and improvements. Section IV compares the performance of Theano against Torch7 and TensorFlow on several machine learning models. Section V discusses current limitations of Theano and potential ways of improving it.