English

Timeception for Complex Action Recognition

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2019-04-30 v2

Abstract

This paper focuses on the temporal aspect for recognizing human activities in videos; an important visual cue that has long been undervalued. We revisit the conventional definition of activity and restrict it to Complex Action: a set of one-actions with a weak temporal pattern that serves a specific purpose. Related works use spatiotemporal 3D convolutions with fixed kernel size, too rigid to capture the varieties in temporal extents of complex actions, and too short for long-range temporal modeling. In contrast, we use multi-scale temporal convolutions, and we reduce the complexity of 3D convolutions. The outcome is Timeception convolution layers, which reasons about minute-long temporal patterns, a factor of 8 longer than best related works. As a result, Timeception achieves impressive accuracy in recognizing the human activities of Charades, Breakfast Actions, and MultiTHUMOS. Further, we demonstrate that Timeception learns long-range temporal dependencies and tolerate temporal extents of complex actions.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1812.01289,
  title  = {Timeception for Complex Action Recognition},
  author = {Noureldien Hussein and Efstratios Gavves and Arnold W. M. Smeulders},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1812.01289},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

IEEE CVPR 2019 (Oral)