Event Retrieval Using Motion Barcodes

12/03/2014
by   Gil Ben-Artzi, et al.
0

We introduce a simple and effective method for retrieval of videos showing a specific event, even when the videos of that event were captured from significantly different viewpoints. Appearance-based methods fail in such cases, as appearances change with large changes of viewpoints. Our method is based on a pixel-based feature, "motion barcode", which records the existence/non-existence of motion as a function of time. While appearance, motion magnitude, and motion direction can vary greatly between disparate viewpoints, the existence of motion is viewpoint invariant. Based on the motion barcode, a similarity measure is developed for videos of the same event taken from very different viewpoints. This measure is robust to occlusions common under different viewpoints, and can be computed efficiently. Event retrieval is demonstrated using challenging videos from stationary and hand held cameras.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
12/14/2016

Temporal-Needle: A view and appearance invariant video descriptor

The ability to detect similar actions across videos can be very useful f...
research
06/08/2015

Circulant temporal encoding for video retrieval and temporal alignment

We address the problem of specific video event retrieval. Given a query ...
research
03/25/2022

TimeReplayer: Unlocking the Potential of Event Cameras for Video Interpolation

Recording fast motion in a high FPS (frame-per-second) requires expensiv...
research
07/26/2016

Fundamental Matrices from Moving Objects Using Line Motion Barcodes

Computing the epipolar geometry between cameras with very different view...
research
06/10/2022

Globally-Optimal Contrast Maximisation for Event Cameras

Event cameras are bio-inspired sensors that perform well in challenging ...
research
10/29/2016

Multi-Camera Occlusion and Sudden-Appearance-Change Detection Using Hidden Markovian Chains

This paper was originally submitted to Xinova as a response to a Request...
research
07/23/2019

A-MAL: Automatic Motion Assessment Learning from Properly Performed Motions in 3D Skeleton Videos

Assessment of motion quality has recently gained high demand in a variet...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset