Proceedings of the 6th International Joint Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems 2007
DOI: 10.1145/1329125.1329409
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Conditional random fields for activity recognition

Abstract: To act intelligently in the presence of others, robots must use information from their sensors to recognize the behaviors and activities of the other agents in their environment. Robots must map from low-level, difficult to interpret data, such as position information extracted from video, to abstract states, in particular, the activities of the other agents. In this thesis, we explore how to bridge the gap from noisy, continuous observations about the world to high-level, discrete activity labels for robots i… Show more

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Cited by 263 publications
(145 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
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“…1) How detrimental is hard labeling: Fig. 4 shows the performance of two baseline approaches ( [5] in dashed lines and the state-of-the-art approach [19] in dotted lines). We can see that both of the baselines drop dramatically with the decreasing confidence level.…”
Section: E Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…1) How detrimental is hard labeling: Fig. 4 shows the performance of two baseline approaches ( [5] in dashed lines and the state-of-the-art approach [19] in dotted lines). We can see that both of the baselines drop dramatically with the decreasing confidence level.…”
Section: E Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A variety of graphical models have been proposed in the literature. Vail et al [19] model the activities in a linear-chain structure, where activity nodes of the temporal segments are inter-connected. Koppula et al [10] model both activities and objects affordance as random variables.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…To overcome such limitations, these models have been extended in order to support more complex relations. Examples of such extensions include representing interactions involving multiple domain objects (Brand et al 1997;Gong and Xiang 2003;Vail et al 2007;Wu et al 2007), capturing long-term dependencies between states (Hongeng and Nevatia 2003), as well as describing a hierarchical composition of activities (Liao et al 2007;Natarajan and Nevatia 2007). However, the lack of a formal representation language makes the definition of complex LTA complicated and the integration of domain background knowledge very hard.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%