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Poster

ConMe: Rethinking Evaluation of Compositional Reasoning for Modern VLMs

Irene Huang · Wei Lin · Muhammad Jehanzeb Mirza · Jacob Hansen · Sivan Doveh · Victor Butoi · Roei Herzig · Assaf Arbelle · Hilde Kuehne · Trevor Darrell · Chuang Gan · Aude Oliva · Rogerio Feris · Leonid Karlinsky

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Fri 13 Dec 11 a.m. PST — 2 p.m. PST

Abstract:

Compositional Reasoning (CR) entails grasping the significance of attributes, relations, and word order. Recent Vision-Language Models (VLMs), comprising a visual encoder and a Large Language Model (LLM) decoder, have demonstrated remarkable proficiency in such reasoning tasks. This prompts a crucial question: have VLMs effectively tackled the CR challenge? We conjecture that existing CR benchmarks may not adequately push the boundaries of modern VLMs due to the reliance on an LLM only negative text generation pipeline. Consequently, the negatives produced either appear as outliers from the natural language distribution learned by VLMs' LLM decoders or as improbable within the corresponding image context. To address these limitations, we introduce ConMe\footnote{ConMe is an abbreviation for Confuse Me.} -- a compositional reasoning benchmark and a novel data generation pipeline leveraging VLMs to produce `hard CR Q&A'. Through a new concept of VLMs conversing with each other to collaboratively expose their weaknesses, our pipeline autonomously generates, evaluates, and selects challenging compositional reasoning questions, establishing a robust CR benchmark, also subsequently validated manually. Our benchmark provokes a noteworthy, up to 33%, decrease in CR performance compared to preceding benchmarks, reinstating the CR challenge even for state-of-the-art VLMs.

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