13,376 research outputs found
Towards Automatic Speech Identification from Vocal Tract Shape Dynamics in Real-time MRI
Vocal tract configurations play a vital role in generating distinguishable
speech sounds, by modulating the airflow and creating different resonant
cavities in speech production. They contain abundant information that can be
utilized to better understand the underlying speech production mechanism. As a
step towards automatic mapping of vocal tract shape geometry to acoustics, this
paper employs effective video action recognition techniques, like Long-term
Recurrent Convolutional Networks (LRCN) models, to identify different
vowel-consonant-vowel (VCV) sequences from dynamic shaping of the vocal tract.
Such a model typically combines a CNN based deep hierarchical visual feature
extractor with Recurrent Networks, that ideally makes the network
spatio-temporally deep enough to learn the sequential dynamics of a short video
clip for video classification tasks. We use a database consisting of 2D
real-time MRI of vocal tract shaping during VCV utterances by 17 speakers. The
comparative performances of this class of algorithms under various parameter
settings and for various classification tasks are discussed. Interestingly, the
results show a marked difference in the model performance in the context of
speech classification with respect to generic sequence or video classification
tasks.Comment: To appear in the INTERSPEECH 2018 Proceeding
Evaluating Two-Stream CNN for Video Classification
Videos contain very rich semantic information. Traditional hand-crafted
features are known to be inadequate in analyzing complex video semantics.
Inspired by the huge success of the deep learning methods in analyzing image,
audio and text data, significant efforts are recently being devoted to the
design of deep nets for video analytics. Among the many practical needs,
classifying videos (or video clips) based on their major semantic categories
(e.g., "skiing") is useful in many applications. In this paper, we conduct an
in-depth study to investigate important implementation options that may affect
the performance of deep nets on video classification. Our evaluations are
conducted on top of a recent two-stream convolutional neural network (CNN)
pipeline, which uses both static frames and motion optical flows, and has
demonstrated competitive performance against the state-of-the-art methods. In
order to gain insights and to arrive at a practical guideline, many important
options are studied, including network architectures, model fusion, learning
parameters and the final prediction methods. Based on the evaluations, very
competitive results are attained on two popular video classification
benchmarks. We hope that the discussions and conclusions from this work can
help researchers in related fields to quickly set up a good basis for further
investigations along this very promising direction.Comment: ACM ICMR'1
LSTM Pose Machines
We observed that recent state-of-the-art results on single image human pose
estimation were achieved by multi-stage Convolution Neural Networks (CNN).
Notwithstanding the superior performance on static images, the application of
these models on videos is not only computationally intensive, it also suffers
from performance degeneration and flicking. Such suboptimal results are mainly
attributed to the inability of imposing sequential geometric consistency,
handling severe image quality degradation (e.g. motion blur and occlusion) as
well as the inability of capturing the temporal correlation among video frames.
In this paper, we proposed a novel recurrent network to tackle these problems.
We showed that if we were to impose the weight sharing scheme to the
multi-stage CNN, it could be re-written as a Recurrent Neural Network (RNN).
This property decouples the relationship among multiple network stages and
results in significantly faster speed in invoking the network for videos. It
also enables the adoption of Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) units between video
frames. We found such memory augmented RNN is very effective in imposing
geometric consistency among frames. It also well handles input quality
degradation in videos while successfully stabilizes the sequential outputs. The
experiments showed that our approach significantly outperformed current
state-of-the-art methods on two large-scale video pose estimation benchmarks.
We also explored the memory cells inside the LSTM and provided insights on why
such mechanism would benefit the prediction for video-based pose estimations.Comment: Poster in IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
(CVPR), 201
Deep convolutional and LSTM recurrent neural networks for multimodal wearable activity recognition
Human activity recognition (HAR) tasks have traditionally been solved using engineered features obtained by heuristic processes. Current research suggests that deep convolutional neural networks are suited to automate feature extraction from raw sensor inputs. However, human activities are made of complex sequences of motor movements, and capturing this temporal dynamics is fundamental for successful HAR. Based on the recent success of recurrent neural networks for time series domains, we propose a generic deep framework for activity recognition based on convolutional and LSTM recurrent units, which: (i) is suitable for multimodal wearable sensors; (ii) can perform sensor fusion naturally; (iii) does not require expert knowledge in designing features; and (iv) explicitly models the temporal dynamics of feature activations. We evaluate our framework on two datasets, one of which has been used in a public activity recognition challenge. Our results show that our framework outperforms competing deep non-recurrent networks on the challenge dataset by 4% on average; outperforming some of the previous reported results by up to 9%. Our results show that the framework can be applied to homogeneous sensor modalities, but can also fuse multimodal sensors to improve performance. We characterise key architectural hyperparameters’ influence on performance to provide insights about their optimisation
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