Synthetic Humans for Action Recognition from Unseen Viewpoints
This work addresses the challenge of viewpoint generalization in action recognition for computer vision applications, representing an incremental advance by applying synthetic data to a relatively unexplored area.
The paper tackles the problem of improving human action recognition, particularly for unseen viewpoints, by using synthetic humans generated from monocular 3D reconstructions. It shows substantial improvements in state-of-the-art performance on standard benchmarks like NTU RGB+D and UESTC, with extensions to in-the-wild videos from Kinetics.
Although synthetic training data has been shown to be beneficial for tasks such as human pose estimation, its use for RGB human action recognition is relatively unexplored. Our goal in this work is to answer the question whether synthetic humans can improve the performance of human action recognition, with a particular focus on generalization to unseen viewpoints. We make use of the recent advances in monocular 3D human body reconstruction from real action sequences to automatically render synthetic training videos for the action labels. We make the following contributions: (i) we investigate the extent of variations and augmentations that are beneficial to improving performance at new viewpoints. We consider changes in body shape and clothing for individuals, as well as more action relevant augmentations such as non-uniform frame sampling, and interpolating between the motion of individuals performing the same action; (ii) We introduce a new data generation methodology, SURREACT, that allows training of spatio-temporal CNNs for action classification; (iii) We substantially improve the state-of-the-art action recognition performance on the NTU RGB+D and UESTC standard human action multi-view benchmarks; Finally, (iv) we extend the augmentation approach to in-the-wild videos from a subset of the Kinetics dataset to investigate the case when only one-shot training data is available, and demonstrate improvements in this case as well.