Detecting Engagement in Egocentric Video

04/04/2016
by   Yu-Chuan Su, et al.
0

In a wearable camera video, we see what the camera wearer sees. While this makes it easy to know roughly what he chose to look at, it does not immediately reveal when he was engaged with the environment. Specifically, at what moments did his focus linger, as he paused to gather more information about something he saw? Knowing this answer would benefit various applications in video summarization and augmented reality, yet prior work focuses solely on the "what" question (estimating saliency, gaze) without considering the "when" (engagement). We propose a learning-based approach that uses long-term egomotion cues to detect engagement, specifically in browsing scenarios where one frequently takes in new visual information (e.g., shopping, touring). We introduce a large, richly annotated dataset for ego-engagement that is the first of its kind. Our approach outperforms a wide array of existing methods. We show engagement can be detected well independent of both scene appearance and the camera wearer's identity.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 5

page 7

page 9

research
12/21/2017

AVEID: Automatic Video System for Measuring Engagement In Dementia

Engagement in dementia is typically measured using behavior observationa...
research
01/10/2020

Are you still with me? Continuous Engagement Assessment from a Robot's Point of View

Continuously measuring the engagement of users with a robot in a Human-R...
research
04/25/2016

Long-Term Identity-Aware Multi-Person Tracking for Surveillance Video Summarization

Multi-person tracking plays a critical role in the analysis of surveilla...
research
04/03/2018

Prediction and Localization of Student Engagement in the Wild

Student engagement localization can play a key role in designing success...
research
02/01/2023

Do I Have Your Attention: A Large Scale Engagement Prediction Dataset and Baselines

The degree of concentration, enthusiasm, optimism, and passion displayed...
research
05/03/2022

Episodic Memory Question Answering

Egocentric augmented reality devices such as wearable glasses passively ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset