Zero-Shot Action Recognition in Surveillance Videos
This addresses the problem of limited datasets and difficult settings in surveillance video analysis for public safety applications, representing an incremental improvement.
The paper tackled zero-shot action recognition in surveillance videos by leveraging Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs) and an improved token-level sampling method, achieving a 20% boost over the baseline and 44.6% performance on the UCF-Crime dataset.
The growing demand for surveillance in public spaces presents significant challenges due to the shortage of human resources. Current AI-based video surveillance systems heavily rely on core computer vision models that require extensive finetuning, which is particularly difficult in surveillance settings due to limited datasets and difficult setting (viewpoint, low quality, etc.). In this work, we propose leveraging Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs), known for their strong zero and few-shot generalization, to tackle video understanding tasks in surveillance. Specifically, we explore VideoLLaMA2, a state-of-the-art LVLM, and an improved token-level sampling method, Self-Reflective Sampling (Self-ReS). Our experiments on the UCF-Crime dataset show that VideoLLaMA2 represents a significant leap in zero-shot performance, with 20% boost over the baseline. Self-ReS additionally increases zero-shot action recognition performance to 44.6%. These results highlight the potential of LVLMs, paired with improved sampling techniques, for advancing surveillance video analysis in diverse scenarios.