Abstract
Action recognition has become a hot topic within computer vision. However, the action recognition community has focused mainly on relatively simple actions like clapping, walking, jogging, etc. The detection of specific events with direct practical use such as fights or in general aggressive behavior has been comparatively less studied. Such capability may be extremely useful in some video surveillance scenarios like prisons, psychiatric centers or even embedded in camera phones. As a consequence, there is growing interest in developing violence detection algorithms. Recent work considered the well-known Bag-of-Words framework for the specific problem of fight detection. Under this framework, spatio-temporal features are extracted from the video sequences and used for classification. Despite encouraging results in which high accuracy rates were achieved, the computational cost of extracting such features is prohibitive for practical applications. This work proposes a novel method to detect violence sequences. Features extracted from motion blobs are used to discriminate fight and non-fight sequences. Although the method is outperformed in accuracy by state of the art, it has a significantly faster computation time thus making it amenable for real-time applications.
Highlights
In the last few years, the problem of human action recognition from video has become tractable by using computer vision techniques, see surveys [1], [2], [3]
The non-fight videos were extracted from public action recognition datasets
This work has described a novel method for detecting fights
Summary
In the last few years, the problem of human action recognition from video has become tractable by using computer vision techniques, see surveys [1], [2], [3]. Within this topic, there is a vast literature in which experimental results are given for recognition of human actions like walking, jumping or hand waving [4]. Action detection may be of direct use in real-life applications, fight detection being a clear example. Whereas there is a number of well-studied datasets for action recognition, significant datasets with violent actions (fights) have not been made available until the work [5].
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