English

Leveraging Self-Supervised Training for Unintentional Action Recognition

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2022-09-27 v1

Abstract

Unintentional actions are rare occurrences that are difficult to define precisely and that are highly dependent on the temporal context of the action. In this work, we explore such actions and seek to identify the points in videos where the actions transition from intentional to unintentional. We propose a multi-stage framework that exploits inherent biases such as motion speed, motion direction, and order to recognize unintentional actions. To enhance representations via self-supervised training for the task of unintentional action recognition we propose temporal transformations, called Temporal Transformations of Inherent Biases of Unintentional Actions (T2IBUA). The multi-stage approach models the temporal information on both the level of individual frames and full clips. These enhanced representations show strong performance for unintentional action recognition tasks. We provide an extensive ablation study of our framework and report results that significantly improve over the state-of-the-art.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2209.11870,
  title  = {Leveraging Self-Supervised Training for Unintentional Action Recognition},
  author = {Enea Duka and Anna Kukleva and Bernt Schiele},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2209.11870},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

Accepted at ECCVW2022

R2 v1 2026-06-28T02:00:05.574Z