Contextual Explainable Video Representation: Human Perception-based Understanding
This work addresses video understanding for researchers and practitioners by offering a more interpretable feature extraction method, though it is incremental as it builds on existing approaches with a focus on explainability.
The paper tackles the challenge of extracting contextual visual representations from untrimmed videos by proposing an explainable mechanism based on human perception of actors, objects, and environment interactions, achieving improved performance in video paragraph captioning and temporal action detection tasks.
Video understanding is a growing field and a subject of intense research, which includes many interesting tasks to understanding both spatial and temporal information, e.g., action detection, action recognition, video captioning, video retrieval. One of the most challenging problems in video understanding is dealing with feature extraction, i.e. extract contextual visual representation from given untrimmed video due to the long and complicated temporal structure of unconstrained videos. Different from existing approaches, which apply a pre-trained backbone network as a black-box to extract visual representation, our approach aims to extract the most contextual information with an explainable mechanism. As we observed, humans typically perceive a video through the interactions between three main factors, i.e., the actors, the relevant objects, and the surrounding environment. Therefore, it is very crucial to design a contextual explainable video representation extraction that can capture each of such factors and model the relationships between them. In this paper, we discuss approaches, that incorporate the human perception process into modeling actors, objects, and the environment. We choose video paragraph captioning and temporal action detection to illustrate the effectiveness of human perception based-contextual representation in video understanding. Source code is publicly available at https://github.com/UARK-AICV/Video_Representation.