Publication | Closed Access
Hierarchical Long Short-Term Concurrent Memory for Human Interaction Recognition
196
Citations
41
References
2019
Year
EngineeringMachine LearningHuman Pose EstimationMultimodal LearningRecurrent Neural NetworkSocial SciencesVideo InterpretationImage AnalysisData SciencePattern RecognitionMemoryNovel Concurrent LstmRobot LearningHuman Interaction RecognitionCognitive ScienceMultimodal Signal ProcessingComputer ScienceVideo UnderstandingDeep LearningComputer VisionCell GateActivity Recognition
In this work, we aim to address the problem of human interaction recognition in videos by exploring the long-term inter-related dynamics among multiple persons. Recently, Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) has become a popular choice to model individual dynamic for single-person action recognition due to its ability to capture the temporal motion information in a range. However, most existing LSTM-based methods focus only on capturing the dynamics of human interaction by simply combining all dynamics of individuals or modeling them as a whole. Such methods neglect the inter-related dynamics of how human interactions change over time. To this end, we propose a novel Hierarchical Long Short-Term Concurrent Memory (H-LSTCM) to model the long-term inter-related dynamics among a group of persons for recognizing human interactions. Specifically, we first feed each person's static features into a Single-Person LSTM to model the single-person dynamic. Subsequently, at one time step, the outputs of all Single-Person LSTM units are fed into a novel Concurrent LSTM (Co-LSTM) unit, which mainly consists of multiple sub-memory units, a new cell gate, and a new co-memory cell. In the Co-LSTM unit, each sub-memory unit stores individual motion information, while this Co-LSTM unit selectively integrates and stores inter-related motion information between multiple interacting persons from multiple sub-memory units via the cell gate and co-memory cell, respectively. Extensive experiments on several public datasets validate the effectiveness of the proposed H-LSTCM by comparing against baseline and state-of-the-art methods.
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