Abstract
Optical flow is an important computer vision technique used for motion estimation, object tracking and activity recognition. In this paper, we study the effectiveness of the optical flow feature in recognizing simple actions by using only their RGB visualizations as input to a deep neural network. Feeding only the optical flow visualizations, instead of the raw multimedia content, ensures that only a single motion feature is used as a classification criterion. Here, we deal with human action recognition as a multi-class classification problem. In order to categorize an action, we train an AlexNet-like Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) on Farneback optical flow visualization features of the action videos. We have chosen the KTH data set, which contains six types of action videos, namely walking, running, boxing, jogging, hand-clapping and hand-waving. The accuracy obtained on the test set is 84.72%, and it is naturally less than the state of the art since only a single motion feature is used for classification, but it is high enough to show the effectiveness of optical flow visualization as a good distinguishing criterion for action recognition. The AlexNet-like CNN was trained in Caffe on two NVIDIA Quadro K4200 GPU cards, while the Farneback optical flow features were calculated using OpenCV library.
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