Abstract

Scene recognition in an unconstrained setting is an open and challenging problem with wide applications. In this paper, we study the role of scene dynamics for improved representation of scenes. We subsequently propose dynamic attributes which can be augmented with spatial attributes of a scene for semantically meaningful categorization of dynamic scenes. We further explore accurate and generalizable computational models for characterizing the dynamics of unconstrained scenes. The large intra-class variation due to unconstrained settings and the complex underlying physics present challenging problems in modeling scene dynamics. Motivated by these factors, we propose using the theory of chaotic systems to capture dynamics. Due to the lack of a suitable dataset, we compiled a dataset of `in-the-wild' dynamic scenes. Experimental results show that the proposed framework leads to the best classification rate among other well-known dynamic modeling techniques. We also show how these dynamic features provide a means to describe dynamic scenes with motion-attributes, which then leads to meaningful organization of the video data.

Keywords

Computer scienceCategorizationArtificial intelligenceRepresentation (politics)Motion (physics)Dynamics (music)ChaoticClass (philosophy)Computer visionMachine learning

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Publication Info

Year
2010
Type
article
Pages
1911-1918
Citations
104
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Nitesh Shroff, Pavan Turaga, Rama Chellappa (2010). Moving vistas: Exploiting motion for describing scenes. , 1911-1918. https://doi.org/10.1109/cvpr.2010.5539864

Identifiers

DOI
10.1109/cvpr.2010.5539864