GENOME: GenerativE Neuro-symbOlic visual reasoning by growing and reusing ModulEs
Recent works have shown that Large Language Models (LLMs) could empower traditional neuro-symbolic models via programming capabilities to translate language into module descriptions, thus achieving strong visual reasoning results while maintaining the model's transparency and efficiency. Howeve...
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent works have shown that Large Language Models (LLMs) could empower
traditional neuro-symbolic models via programming capabilities to translate
language into module descriptions, thus achieving strong visual reasoning
results while maintaining the model's transparency and efficiency. However,
these models usually exhaustively generate the entire code snippet given each
new instance of a task, which is extremely ineffective. We propose generative
neuro-symbolic visual reasoning by growing and reusing modules. Specifically,
our model consists of three unique stages, module initialization, module
generation, and module execution. First, given a vision-language task, we adopt
LLMs to examine whether we could reuse and grow over established modules to
handle this new task. If not, we initialize a new module needed by the task and
specify the inputs and outputs of this new module. After that, the new module
is created by querying LLMs to generate corresponding code snippets that match
the requirements. In order to get a better sense of the new module's ability,
we treat few-shot training examples as test cases to see if our new module
could pass these cases. If yes, the new module is added to the module library
for future reuse. Finally, we evaluate the performance of our model on the
testing set by executing the parsed programs with the newly made visual modules
to get the results. We find the proposed model possesses several advantages.
First, it performs competitively on standard tasks like visual question
answering and referring expression comprehension; Second, the modules learned
from one task can be seamlessly transferred to new tasks; Last but not least,
it is able to adapt to new visual reasoning tasks by observing a few training
examples and reusing modules. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2311.04901 |