IEEE Access (Jan 2020)

A Hybrid Deep Model Using Deep Learning and Dense Optical Flow Approaches for Human Activity Recognition

  • Senem Tanberk,
  • Zeynep Hilal Kilimci,
  • Dilek Bilgin Tukel,
  • Mitat Uysal,
  • Selim Akyokus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2020.2968529
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 19799 – 19809

Abstract

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Human activity recognition is a challenging problem with many applications including visual surveillance, human-computer interactions, autonomous driving and entertainment. In this study, we propose a hybrid deep model to understand and interpret videos focusing on human activity recognition. The proposed architecture is constructed combining dense optical flow approach and auxiliary movement information in video datasets using deep learning methodologies. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study based on a novel combination of 3D-convolutional neural networks (3D-CNNs) fed by optical flow and long short-term memory networks (LSTM) fed by auxiliary information over video frames for the purpose of human activity recognition. The contributions of this paper are sixfold. First, a 3D-CNN, also called multiple frames is employed to determine the motion vectors. With the same purpose, the 3D-CNN is secondly used for dense optical flow, which is the distribution of apparent velocities of movement in captured imagery data in video frames. Third, the LSTM is employed as auxiliary information in video to recognize hand-tracking and objects. Fourth, the support vector machine algorithm is utilized for the task of classification of videos. Fifth, a wide range of comparative experiments are conducted on two newly generated chess datasets, namely the magnetic wall chess board video dataset (MCDS), and standard chess board video dataset (CDS) to demonstrate the contributions of the proposed study. Finally, the experimental results reveal that the proposed hybrid deep model exhibits remarkable performance compared to the state-of-the-art studies.

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