» Articles » PMID: 9304692

Movement, Activity and Action: the Role of Knowledge in the Perception of Motion

Overview
Specialty Biology
Date 1997 Aug 29
PMID 9304692
Citations 7
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This paper presents several approaches to the machine perception of motion and discusses the role and levels of knowledge in each. In particular, different techniques of motion understanding as focusing on one of movement, activity or action are described. Movements are the most atomic primitives, requiring no contextual or sequence knowledge to be recognized; movement is often addressed using either view-invariant or view-specific geometric techniques. Activity refers to sequences of movements or states, where the only real knowledge required is the statistics of the sequence; much of the recent work in gesture understanding falls within this category of motion perception. Finally, actions are larger-scale events, which typically include interaction with the environment and causal relationships; action understanding straddles the grey division between perception and cognition, computer vision and artificial intelligence. These levels are illustrated with examples drawn mostly from the group's work in understanding motion in video imagery. It is argued that the utility of such a division is that it makes explicit the representational competencies and manipulations necessary for perception.

Citing Articles

Postures anomaly tracking and prediction learning model over crowd data analytics.

Aljuaid H, Akhter I, Alsufyani N, Shorfuzzaman M, Alarfaj M, Alnowaiser K PeerJ Comput Sci. 2023; 9:e1355.

PMID: 37346503 PMC: 10280427. DOI: 10.7717/peerj-cs.1355.


A Needs Learning Algorithm Applied to Stable Gait Generation of Quadruped Robot.

Zhang H, Yin J, Wang H Sensors (Basel). 2022; 22(19).

PMID: 36236401 PMC: 9570960. DOI: 10.3390/s22197302.


Sensitivity of occipito-temporal cortex, premotor and Broca's areas to visible speech gestures in a familiar language.

Maffei V, Indovina I, Mazzarella E, Giusti M, Macaluso E, Lacquaniti F PLoS One. 2020; 15(6):e0234695.

PMID: 32559213 PMC: 7304574. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0234695.


Sudden event recognition: a survey.

Suriani N, Hussain A, Zulkifley M Sensors (Basel). 2013; 13(8):9966-98.

PMID: 23921828 PMC: 3812589. DOI: 10.3390/s130809966.


Online prediction of others' actions: the contribution of the target object, action context and movement kinematics.

Stapel J, Hunnius S, Bekkering H Psychol Res. 2012; 76(4):434-45.

PMID: 22398683 PMC: 3383950. DOI: 10.1007/s00426-012-0423-2.