Abstract

Previous work utilized three-dimensional (3-D) convolutional neural networks (CNNs) tomodel the spatial appearance and temporal evolution concurrently for sign language recognition (SLR) and exhibited impressive performance. However, there are still challenges for 3-D CNN-based methods. First, motion information plays a more significant role than spatial content in sign language. Therefore, it is still questionable whether to treat space and time equally and model them jointly by heavy 3-D convolutions in a unified approach. Second, because of the interference from the highly redundant information in sign videos, it is still nontrivial to effectively extract discriminative spatiotemporal features related to sign language. In this study, deep R(2+1)D was adopted for separate spatial and temporal modeling and demonstrated that decomposing 3-D convolution filters into independent spatial and temporal convolutions facilitates the optimization process in SLR. A lightweight spatial–temporal–channel attention module, including two submodules called channel–temporal attention and spatial–temporal attention, was proposed to make the network concentrate on the significant information along spatial, temporal, and channel dimensions by combining squeeze and excitation attention with self-attention. By embedding this module into R(2+1)D, superior or comparable results to the state-of-the-art methods on the CSL-500, Jester, and EgoGesture datasets were obtained, which demonstrated the effectiveness of the proposed method.

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