DocumentCode :
1299659
Title :
Action Recognition Using Mined Hierarchical Compound Features
Author :
Gilbert, Andrew ; Illingworth, John ; Bowden, Richard
Author_Institution :
Centre for Vision, Speech, & Signal Process., Univ. of Surrey, Guildford, UK
Volume :
33
Issue :
5
fYear :
2011
fDate :
5/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
883
Lastpage :
897
Abstract :
The field of Action Recognition has seen a large increase in activity in recent years. Much of the progress has been through incorporating ideas from single-frame object recognition and adapting them for temporal-based action recognition. Inspired by the success of interest points in the 2D spatial domain, their 3D (space-time) counterparts typically form the basic components used to describe actions, and in action recognition the features used are often engineered to fire sparsely. This is to ensure that the problem is tractable; however, this can sacrifice recognition accuracy as it cannot be assumed that the optimum features in terms of class discrimination are obtained from this approach. In contrast, we propose to initially use an overcomplete set of simple 2D corners in both space and time. These are grouped spatially and temporally using a hierarchical process, with an increasing search area. At each stage of the hierarchy, the most distinctive and descriptive features are learned efficiently through data mining. This allows large amounts of data to be searched for frequently reoccurring patterns of features. At each level of the hierarchy, the mined compound features become more complex, discriminative, and sparse. This results in fast, accurate recognition with real-time performance on high-resolution video. As the compound features are constructed and selected based upon their ability to discriminate, their speed and accuracy increase at each level of the hierarchy. The approach is tested on four state-of-the-art data sets, the popular KTH data set to provide a comparison with other state-of-the-art approaches, the Multi-KTH data set to illustrate performance at simultaneous multiaction classification, despite no explicit localization information provided during training. Finally, the recent Hollywood and Hollywood2 data sets provide challenging complex actions taken from commercial movie sequences. For all four data sets, the proposed hierarchical approa- h outperforms all other methods reported thus far in the literature and can achieve real-time operation.
Keywords :
data mining; feature extraction; gesture recognition; temporal databases; KTH data set; action recognition; data mining; mined hierarchical compound features; multiaction classification; single-frame object recognition; temporal-based action recognition; Association rules; Compounds; Feature extraction; Itemsets; Object recognition; Action recognition; data mining; learning; real-time; spatiotemporal.; Algorithms; Data Mining; Databases, Factual; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Movement; Pattern Recognition, Automated; Video Recording;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0162-8828
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TPAMI.2010.144
Filename :
5551150
Link To Document :
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