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Main Authors: Chen, Ce, Ren, Yi, Li, Yuanming, Goriachko, Viktor, Ye, Zhenhui, Guo, Zujin, Hong, Zhibin, Gong, Mingming
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.27975
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author Chen, Ce
Ren, Yi
Li, Yuanming
Goriachko, Viktor
Ye, Zhenhui
Guo, Zujin
Hong, Zhibin
Gong, Mingming
author_facet Chen, Ce
Ren, Yi
Li, Yuanming
Goriachko, Viktor
Ye, Zhenhui
Guo, Zujin
Hong, Zhibin
Gong, Mingming
contents Traditional Shot Boundary Detection (SBD) inherently struggles with complex transitions by formulating the task around isolated cut points, frequently yielding corrupted video shots. We address this fundamental limitation by formalizing the Shot Transition Detection (STD) task. Rather than searching for ambiguous points, STD explicitly detects the continuous temporal segments of transitions. To tackle this, we propose TransVLM, a Vision-Language Model (VLM) framework for STD. Unlike regular VLMs that predominantly rely on spatial semantics and struggle with fine-grained inter-shot dynamics, our method explicitly injects optical flow as a critical motion prior at the input stage. Through a simple yet effective feature-fusion strategy, TransVLM directly processes concatenated color and motion representations, significantly enhancing its temporal awareness without incurring any additional visual token overhead on the language backbone. To overcome the severe class imbalance in public data, we design a scalable data engine to synthesize diverse transition videos for robust training, alongside a comprehensive benchmark for STD. Extensive experiments demonstrate that TransVLM achieves superior overall performance, outperforming traditional heuristic methods, specialized spatiotemporal networks, and top-tier VLMs. This work has been deployed to production. For more related research, please visit HeyGen Research (https://www.heygen.com/research) and HeyGen Avatar-V (https://www.heygen.com/research/avatar-v-model). Project page: https://chence17.github.io/TransVLM/
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_27975
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle TransVLM: A Vision-Language Framework and Benchmark for Detecting Any Shot Transitions
Chen, Ce
Ren, Yi
Li, Yuanming
Goriachko, Viktor
Ye, Zhenhui
Guo, Zujin
Hong, Zhibin
Gong, Mingming
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Artificial Intelligence
Traditional Shot Boundary Detection (SBD) inherently struggles with complex transitions by formulating the task around isolated cut points, frequently yielding corrupted video shots. We address this fundamental limitation by formalizing the Shot Transition Detection (STD) task. Rather than searching for ambiguous points, STD explicitly detects the continuous temporal segments of transitions. To tackle this, we propose TransVLM, a Vision-Language Model (VLM) framework for STD. Unlike regular VLMs that predominantly rely on spatial semantics and struggle with fine-grained inter-shot dynamics, our method explicitly injects optical flow as a critical motion prior at the input stage. Through a simple yet effective feature-fusion strategy, TransVLM directly processes concatenated color and motion representations, significantly enhancing its temporal awareness without incurring any additional visual token overhead on the language backbone. To overcome the severe class imbalance in public data, we design a scalable data engine to synthesize diverse transition videos for robust training, alongside a comprehensive benchmark for STD. Extensive experiments demonstrate that TransVLM achieves superior overall performance, outperforming traditional heuristic methods, specialized spatiotemporal networks, and top-tier VLMs. This work has been deployed to production. For more related research, please visit HeyGen Research (https://www.heygen.com/research) and HeyGen Avatar-V (https://www.heygen.com/research/avatar-v-model). Project page: https://chence17.github.io/TransVLM/
title TransVLM: A Vision-Language Framework and Benchmark for Detecting Any Shot Transitions
topic Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.27975