Pre-training for Action Recognition with Automatically Generated Fractal Datasets
This work addresses the challenge of high data collection and labeling costs for video action recognition, offering a synthetic alternative that is incremental in extending synthetic data methods from images to videos.
The authors tackled the problem of pre-training for action recognition by automatically generating synthetic video datasets using fractal geometry, achieving results that are competitive with and sometimes superior to standard Kinetics pre-training on benchmarks like HMDB51 and UCF101.
In recent years, interest in synthetic data has grown, particularly in the context of pre-training the image modality to support a range of computer vision tasks, including object classification, medical imaging etc. Previous work has demonstrated that synthetic samples, automatically produced by various generative processes, can replace real counterparts and yield strong visual representations. This approach resolves issues associated with real data such as collection and labeling costs, copyright and privacy. We extend this trend to the video domain applying it to the task of action recognition. Employing fractal geometry, we present methods to automatically produce large-scale datasets of short synthetic video clips, which can be utilized for pre-training neural models. The generated video clips are characterized by notable variety, stemmed by the innate ability of fractals to generate complex multi-scale structures. To narrow the domain gap, we further identify key properties of real videos and carefully emulate them during pre-training. Through thorough ablations, we determine the attributes that strengthen downstream results and offer general guidelines for pre-training with synthetic videos. The proposed approach is evaluated by fine-tuning pre-trained models on established action recognition datasets HMDB51 and UCF101 as well as four other video benchmarks related to group action recognition, fine-grained action recognition and dynamic scenes. Compared to standard Kinetics pre-training, our reported results come close and are even superior on a portion of downstream datasets. Code and samples of synthetic videos are available at https://github.com/davidsvy/fractal_video .