Abstract

One of the major difficulties in activity recognition stems from the lack of a model of the world where activities and events are to be recognised. When the domain is fixed and repetitive we can manually include this information using some kind of ontology or set of constraints. On many occasions, however, there are many new situations for which only some knowledge is common and many other domain-specific relations have to be inferred. Humans are able to do this from short descriptions in natural language, describing the scene or the particular task to be performed. In this paper we apply a tool that extracts situation models and rules from natural language description to a series of exercises in a surgical domain, in which we want to identify the sequence of events that are not possible, those that are possible (but incorrect according to the exercise) and those that correspond to the exercise or plan expressed by the description in natural language. The preliminary results show that a large amount of valuable knowledge can be extracted automatically, which could be used to express domain knowledge and exercises description in languages such as event calculus that could help bridge these high-level descriptions with the low-level events that are recognised from videos.

Full Text
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