Research

ComPhy: Compositional Physical Reasoning of Objects and Events from Videos

ICLR

Authors

Published on

04/29/2022

Categories

ICLR

Objects’ motions in nature are governed by complex interactions and their properties. While some properties, such as shape and material, can be identified via the object’s visual appearances, others like mass and electric charge are not directly visible. The compositionality between the visible and hidden properties poses unique challenges for AI models to reason from the physical world, whereas humans can effortlessly infer them with limited observations. Existing studies on video reasoning mainly focus on visually observable elements such as object appearance, movement, and contact interaction. In this paper, we take an initial step to highlight the importance of inferring the hidden physical properties not directly observable from visual appearances, by introducing the Compositional Physical Reasoning (ComPhy) dataset 1 . For a given set of objects, ComPhy includes few videos of them moving and interacting under different initial conditions. The model is evaluated based on its capability to unravel the compositional hidden properties, such as mass and charge, and use this knowledge to answer a set of questions posted on one of the videos. Evaluation results of several state-of-the-art video reasoning models on ComPhy show unsatisfactory performance as they fail to capture these hidden properties. We further propose an oracle neural-symbolic framework named Compositional Physics Learner (CPL), combining visual perception, physical property learning, dynamic prediction, and symbolic execution into a unified framework. CPL can effectively identify objects’ physical properties from their interactions and predict their dynamics to answer questions.

Please cite our work using the BibTeX below.

@inproceedings{
chen2022comphy,
title={ComPhy: Compositional Physical Reasoning of Objects and Events from Videos},
author={Zhenfang Chen and Kexin Yi and Yunzhu Li and Mingyu Ding and Antonio Torralba and Joshua B. Tenenbaum and Chuang Gan},
booktitle={International Conference on Learning Representations},
year={2022},
url={https://openreview.net/forum?id=PgNEYaIc81Q}
}
Close Modal