36,823 research outputs found

    Going Deeper into Action Recognition: A Survey

    Full text link
    Understanding human actions in visual data is tied to advances in complementary research areas including object recognition, human dynamics, domain adaptation and semantic segmentation. Over the last decade, human action analysis evolved from earlier schemes that are often limited to controlled environments to nowadays advanced solutions that can learn from millions of videos and apply to almost all daily activities. Given the broad range of applications from video surveillance to human-computer interaction, scientific milestones in action recognition are achieved more rapidly, eventually leading to the demise of what used to be good in a short time. This motivated us to provide a comprehensive review of the notable steps taken towards recognizing human actions. To this end, we start our discussion with the pioneering methods that use handcrafted representations, and then, navigate into the realm of deep learning based approaches. We aim to remain objective throughout this survey, touching upon encouraging improvements as well as inevitable fallbacks, in the hope of raising fresh questions and motivating new research directions for the reader

    Action tube extraction based 3D-CNN for RGB-D action recognition

    Get PDF
    In this paper we propose a novel action tube extractor for RGB-D action recognition in trimmed videos. The action tube extractor takes as input a video and outputs an action tube. The method consists of two parts: spatial tube extraction and temporal sampling. The first part is built upon MobileNet-SSD and its role is to define the spatial region where the action takes place. The second part is based on the structural similarity index (SSIM) and is designed to remove frames without obvious motion from the primary action tube. The final extracted action tube has two benefits: 1) a higher ratio of ROI (subjects of action) to background; 2) most frames contain obvious motion change. We propose to use a two-stream (RGB and Depth) I3D architecture as our 3D-CNN model. Our approach outperforms the state-of-the-art methods on the OA and NTU RGB-D datasets. © 2018 IEEE.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Learning Spatiotemporal Features for Infrared Action Recognition with 3D Convolutional Neural Networks

    Full text link
    Infrared (IR) imaging has the potential to enable more robust action recognition systems compared to visible spectrum cameras due to lower sensitivity to lighting conditions and appearance variability. While the action recognition task on videos collected from visible spectrum imaging has received much attention, action recognition in IR videos is significantly less explored. Our objective is to exploit imaging data in this modality for the action recognition task. In this work, we propose a novel two-stream 3D convolutional neural network (CNN) architecture by introducing the discriminative code layer and the corresponding discriminative code loss function. The proposed network processes IR image and the IR-based optical flow field sequences. We pretrain the 3D CNN model on the visible spectrum Sports-1M action dataset and finetune it on the Infrared Action Recognition (InfAR) dataset. To our best knowledge, this is the first application of the 3D CNN to action recognition in the IR domain. We conduct an elaborate analysis of different fusion schemes (weighted average, single and double-layer neural nets) applied to different 3D CNN outputs. Experimental results demonstrate that our approach can achieve state-of-the-art average precision (AP) performances on the InfAR dataset: (1) the proposed two-stream 3D CNN achieves the best reported 77.5% AP, and (2) our 3D CNN model applied to the optical flow fields achieves the best reported single stream 75.42% AP
    • …
    corecore