English

Towards Stable Self-Supervised Object Representations in Unconstrained Egocentric Video

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2026-03-17 v1

Abstract

Humans develop visual intelligence through perceiving and interacting with their environment - a self-supervised learning process grounded in egocentric experience. Inspired by this, we ask how can artificial systems learn stable object representations from continuous, uncurated first-person videos without relying on manual annotations. This setting poses challenges of separating, recognizing, and persistently tracking objects amid clutter, occlusion, and ego-motion. We propose EgoViT, a unified vision Transformer framework designed to learn stable object representations from unlabeled egocentric video. EgoViT bootstraps this learning process by jointly discovering and stabilizing "proto-objects" through three synergistic mechanisms: (1) Proto-object Learning, which uses intra-frame distillation to form discriminative representations; (2) Depth Regularization, which grounds these representations in geometric structure; and (3) Teacher-Filtered Temporal Consistency, which enforces identity over time. This creates a virtuous cycle where initial object hypotheses are progressively refined into stable, persistent representations. The framework is trained end-to-end on unlabeled first-person videos and exhibits robustness to geometric priors of varied origin and quality. On standard benchmarks, EgoViT achieves +8.0% CorLoc improvement in unsupervised object discovery and +4.8% mIoU improvement in semantic segmentation, demonstrating its potential to lay a foundation for robust visual abstraction in embodied intelligence.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2603.13912,
  title  = {Towards Stable Self-Supervised Object Representations in Unconstrained Egocentric Video},
  author = {Yuting Tan and Xilong Cheng and Yunxiao Qin and Zhengnan Li and Jingjing Zhang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2603.13912},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

24 pages, 11 figures. Accepted to the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) 2026

R2 v1 2026-07-01T11:19:58.769Z