2 datasets found
  1. P

    Hockey Fight Detection Dataset Dataset

    • paperswithcode.com
    Updated Jun 3, 2011
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    (2011). Hockey Fight Detection Dataset Dataset [Dataset]. https://paperswithcode.com/dataset/hockey-fight-detection-dataset
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 3, 2011
    Description

    Whereas the action recognition community has focused mostly on detecting simple actions like clapping, walking or jogging, the detection of fights or in general aggressive behaviors has been comparatively less studied. Such capability may be extremely useful in some video surveillance scenarios like in prisons, psychiatric or elderly centers or even in camera phones. After an analysis of previous approaches we test the well-known Bag-of-Words framework used for action recognition in the specific problem of fight detection, along with two of the best action descriptors currently available: STIP and MoSIFT. For the purpose of evaluation and to foster research on violence detection in video we introduce a new video database containing 1000 sequences divided in two groups: fights and non-fights. Experiments on this database and another one with fights from action movies show that fights can be detected with near 90% accuracy.

  2. a

    Hockey Fight Detection Dataset

    • academictorrents.com
    • opendatalab.com
    bittorrent
    Updated Jun 19, 2016
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    Nievas, Enrique Bermejo and Suarez, Oscar Deniz and Garcia, Gloria Bueno and Sukthankar, Rahul (2016). Hockey Fight Detection Dataset [Dataset]. https://academictorrents.com/details/38d9ed996a5a75a039b84cf8a137be794e7cee89
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    bittorrentAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 19, 2016
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Nievas, Enrique Bermejo and Suarez, Oscar Deniz and Garcia, Gloria Bueno and Sukthankar, Rahul
    License

    https://academictorrents.com/nolicensespecifiedhttps://academictorrents.com/nolicensespecified

    Description

    Whereas the action recognition community has focused mostly on detecting simple actions like clapping, walking or jogging, the detection of fights or in general aggressive behaviors has been comparatively less studied. Such capability may be extremely useful in some video surveillance scenarios like in prisons, psychiatric or elderly centers or even in camera phones. After an analysis of previous approaches we test the well-known Bag-of-Words framework used for action recognition in the specific problem of fight detection, along with two of the best action descriptors currently available: STIP and MoSIFT. For the purpose of evaluation and to foster research on violence detection in video we introduce a new video database containing 1000 sequences divided in two groups: fights and non-fights. Experiments on this database and another one with fights from action movies show that fights can be detected with near 90% accuracy.

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Share
FacebookFacebook
TwitterTwitter
Email
Click to copy link
Link copied
Close
Cite
(2011). Hockey Fight Detection Dataset Dataset [Dataset]. https://paperswithcode.com/dataset/hockey-fight-detection-dataset

Hockey Fight Detection Dataset Dataset

Explore at:
2 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
Jun 3, 2011
Description

Whereas the action recognition community has focused mostly on detecting simple actions like clapping, walking or jogging, the detection of fights or in general aggressive behaviors has been comparatively less studied. Such capability may be extremely useful in some video surveillance scenarios like in prisons, psychiatric or elderly centers or even in camera phones. After an analysis of previous approaches we test the well-known Bag-of-Words framework used for action recognition in the specific problem of fight detection, along with two of the best action descriptors currently available: STIP and MoSIFT. For the purpose of evaluation and to foster research on violence detection in video we introduce a new video database containing 1000 sequences divided in two groups: fights and non-fights. Experiments on this database and another one with fights from action movies show that fights can be detected with near 90% accuracy.

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