Vamba: Understanding Hour-Long Videos with Hybrid Mamba-Transformers

22citations
arXiv:2503.11579
22
citations
#147
in ICCV 2025
of 2701 papers
6
Top Authors
7
Data Points

Abstract

State-of-the-art transformer-based large multimodal models (LMMs) struggle to handle hour-long video inputs due to the quadratic complexity of the causal self-attention operations, leading to high computational costs during training and inference. Existing token compression-based methods reduce the number of video tokens but often incur information loss and remain inefficient for extremely long sequences. In this paper, we explore an orthogonal direction to build a hybrid Mamba-Transformer model (VAMBA) that employs Mamba-2 blocks to encode video tokens with linear complexity. Without any token reduction, VAMBA can encode more than 1024 frames (640$\times$360) on a single GPU, while transformer-based models can only encode 256 frames. On long video input, VAMBA achieves at least 50% reduction in GPU memory usage during training and inference, and nearly doubles the speed per training step compared to transformer-based LMMs. Our experimental results demonstrate that VAMBA improves accuracy by 4.3% on the challenging hour-long video understanding benchmark LVBench over prior efficient video LMMs, and maintains strong performance on a broad spectrum of long and short video understanding tasks.

Citation History

Jan 25, 2026
0
Jan 26, 2026
0
Jan 26, 2026
0
Jan 28, 2026
0
Feb 13, 2026
22+22
Feb 13, 2026
22
Feb 13, 2026
22