Localizing actions through sequential 2d video projections
H Boyraz, MF Tappen… - CVPR 2011 …, 2011 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
H Boyraz, MF Tappen, R Sukthankar
CVPR 2011 WORKSHOPS, 2011•ieeexplore.ieee.orgAction detection in video is a particularly difficult problem because actions must not only be
recognized correctly, but must also be localized in the 3D spatio-temporal volume. This
paper introduces a technique that transforms the 3D localization problem into a series of 2D
detection tasks. This is accomplished by dividing the video into overlapping segments, then
representing each segment with a 2D video projection. The advantage of the 2D projection
is that it makes it convenient to apply the best techniques from object detection to the action …
recognized correctly, but must also be localized in the 3D spatio-temporal volume. This
paper introduces a technique that transforms the 3D localization problem into a series of 2D
detection tasks. This is accomplished by dividing the video into overlapping segments, then
representing each segment with a 2D video projection. The advantage of the 2D projection
is that it makes it convenient to apply the best techniques from object detection to the action …
Action detection in video is a particularly difficult problem because actions must not only be recognized correctly, but must also be localized in the 3D spatio-temporal volume. This paper introduces a technique that transforms the 3D localization problem into a series of 2D detection tasks. This is accomplished by dividing the video into overlapping segments, then representing each segment with a 2D video projection. The advantage of the 2D projection is that it makes it convenient to apply the best techniques from object detection to the action detection problem. Our experiments show that video projection outperforms the latest results on action detection in a direct comparison.
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