We present a model for temporally precise action spotting in videos, which uses a dense set of detection anchors, predicting a detection confidence and corresponding fine-grained temporal displacement for each anchor. We experiment with two trunk architectures, both of which are able to incorporate large temporal contexts while preserving the smaller-scale features required for precise localization: a one-dimensional version of a u-net, and a Transformer encoder (TE). We also suggest best practices for training models of this kind, by applying Sharpness-Aware Minimization (SAM) and mixup data augmentation. We achieve a new state-of-the-art on SoccerNet-v2, the largest soccer video dataset of its kind, with marked improvements in temporal localization. Additionally, our ablations show: the importance of predicting the temporal displacements; the trade-offs between the u-net and TE trunks; and the benefits of training with SAM and mixup.
Comprehensive understanding of key players and actions in multiplayer sports broadcast videos is a challenging problem. Unlike in news or finance videos, sports videos have limited text. While both action recognition for multiplayer sports and detection of players has seen robust research, understanding contextual text in video frames still remains one of the most impactful avenues of sports video understanding. In this work we study extremely accurate semantic text detection and recognition in sports clocks, and challenges therein. We observe unique properties of sports clocks, which makes it hard to utilize general-purpose pre-trained detectors and recognizers, so that text can be accurately understood to the degree of being used to align to external knowledge. We propose a novel distant supervision technique to automatically build sports clock datasets. Along with suitable data augmentations, combined with any state-of-the-art text detection and recognition model architectures, we extract extremely accurate semantic text. Finally, we share our computational architecture pipeline to scale this system in industrial setting and proposed a robust dataset for the same to validate our results.
CCS CONCEPTS• Computing methodologies → Activity recognition and understanding; Visual content-based indexing and retrieval; Scene understanding; Object detection; Object recognition.
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