PTR: A Benchmark for Part-based Conceptual, Relational, and Physical Reasoning
Authors
Authors
- Yining Hong
- Li Yi
- Joshua Tenenbaum
- Antonio Torralba
- Chuang Gan
Authors
- Yining Hong
- Li Yi
- Joshua Tenenbaum
- Antonio Torralba
- Chuang Gan
Published on
05/21/2021
A critical aspect of human visual perception is the ability to parse visual scenes into individual objects and further into object parts, forming part-whole hierarchies. Such composite structures could induce a rich set of semantic concepts and relations, thus playing an important role in the interpretation and organization of visual signals as well as for the generalization of visual perception and reasoning. However, existing visual reasoning benchmarks mostly focus on objects rather than parts. Visual reasoning based on the full part-whole hierarchy is much more challenging than object-centric reasoning due to finer-grained concepts, richer geometry relations, and more complex physics. Therefore, to better serve for part-based conceptual, relational and physical reasoning, we introduce a new large-scale diagnostic visual reasoning dataset named PTR. PTR contains around 80k RGBD synthetic images with ground truth object and part level annotations regarding semantic instance segmentation, color attributes, spatial and geometric relationships, and certain physical properties such as stability. These images are paired with 800k machine-generated questions covering various types of reasoning types, making them a good testbed for visual reasoning models. We examine several state-of-the-art visual reasoning models on this dataset and observe that they still make many surprising mistakes in situations where humans can easily infer the correct answer. We believe this dataset will open up new opportunities for part-based reasoning. PTR dataset and baseline models are publicly available.
This paper has been published at NeurIPS 2021
Please cite our work using the BibTeX below.
@inproceedings{
hong2021ptr,
title={{PTR}: A Benchmark for Part-based Conceptual, Relational, and Physical Reasoning},
author={Yining Hong and Li Yi and Joshua B. Tenenbaum and Antonio Torralba and Chuang Gan},
booktitle={Thirty-Fifth Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems},
year={2021},
url={https://openreview.net/forum?id=dTp-VUFDIB}
}