Video Trajectory Classification and Anomaly Detection Using Hybrid CNN-VAE
This addresses traffic anomaly detection in surveillance systems, but it appears incremental as it combines existing techniques (CNN, VAE, t-SNE) with some novel preprocessing steps.
The paper tackles the problem of classifying video object trajectories of varying lengths and detecting traffic anomalies in surveillance videos using a hybrid CNN-VAE architecture, achieving higher accuracy compared to existing methods for anomalies like vehicles not following lane driving and sudden speed variations.
Classifying time series data using neural networks is a challenging problem when the length of the data varies. Video object trajectories, which are key to many of the visual surveillance applications, are often found to be of varying length. If such trajectories are used to understand the behavior (normal or anomalous) of moving objects, they need to be represented correctly. In this paper, we propose video object trajectory classification and anomaly detection using a hybrid Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) and Variational Autoencoder (VAE) architecture. First, we introduce a high level representation of object trajectories using color gradient form. In the next stage, a semi-supervised way to annotate moving object trajectories extracted using Temporal Unknown Incremental Clustering (TUIC), has been applied for trajectory class labeling. Anomalous trajectories are separated using t-Distributed Stochastic Neighbor Embedding (t-SNE). Finally, a hybrid CNN-VAE architecture has been used for trajectory classification and anomaly detection. The results obtained using publicly available surveillance video datasets reveal that the proposed method can successfully identify some of the important traffic anomalies such as vehicles not following lane driving, sudden speed variations, abrupt termination of vehicle movement, and vehicles moving in wrong directions. The proposed method is able to detect above anomalies at higher accuracy as compared to existing anomaly detection methods.