This paper summarizes the ChaLearn Looking at People 2014 challenge data and the results obtained by the participants. The competition was split into three independent tracks: human pose recovery from RGB data, action and interaction recognition from RGB data sequences, and multi-modal gesture recognition from RGB-Depth sequences. For all the tracks, the goal was to perform user-independent recognition in sequences of continuous images using the overlapping Jaccard index as the evaluation measure. In this edition of the ChaLearn challenge, two large novel data sets were made publicly available and the Microsoft Codalab platform were used to manage the competition. Outstanding results were achieved in the three challenge tracks, with accuracy results of 0.20, 0.50, and 0.85 for pose recovery, action/interaction recognition, and multi-modal gesture recognition, respectively.
The Human-Machine Interaction (HMI) research field is an important topic in machine learning that has been deeply investigated thanks to the rise of computing power in the last years. The first time, it is possible to use machine learning to classify images and/or videos instead of the traditional computer vision algorithms. The aim of this paper is to build a symbiosis between a convolutional neural network (CNN)[1] and a recurrent neural network (RNN) [2] to recognize cultural/anthropological Italian sign language gestures from videos. The CNN extracts important features that later are used by the RNN. With RNNs we are able to store temporal information inside the model to provide contextual information from previous frames to enhance the prediction accuracy. Our novel approach uses different data augmentation techniques and regularization methods from only RGB frames to avoid overfitting and provide a small generalization error.
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