JOURNAL ARTICLE

M3Net: Multi-view Encoding, Matching, and Fusion for Few-shot Fine-grained Action Recognition

Abstract

Due to the scarcity of manually annotated data required for fine-grained video understanding, few-shot fine-grained (FS-FG) action recognition has gained significant attention, with the aim of classifying novel fine-grained action categories with only a few labeled instances. Despite the progress made in FS coarse-grained action recognition, current approaches encounter two challenges when dealing with the fine-grained action categories: the inability to capture subtle action details and the insufficiency of learning from limited data that exhibit high intra-class variance and inter-class similarity. To address these limitations, we propose M3Net, a matching-based framework for FS-FG action recognition, which incorporates multi-view encoding, multi-view matching, and multi-view fusion to facilitate embedding encoding, similarity matching, and decision making across multiple viewpoints.Multi-view encoding captures rich contextual details from the intra-frame, intra-video, and intra-episode perspectives, generating customized higher-order embeddings for fine-grained data.Multi-view matching integrates various matching functions enabling flexible relation modeling within limited samples to handle multi-scale spatio-temporal variations by leveraging the instance-specific, category-specific, and task-specific perspectives. Multi-view fusion consists of matching-predictions fusion and matching-losses fusion over the above views, where the former promotes mutual complementarity and the latter enhances embedding generalizability by employing multi-task collaborative learning. Explainable visualizations and experimental results on three challenging benchmarks demonstrate the superiority of M3Net in capturing fine-grained action details and achieving state-of-the-art performance for FS-FG action recognition.

Keywords:
Computer science Matching (statistics) Artificial intelligence Embedding Generalizability theory Encoding (memory) Pattern recognition (psychology) Task (project management) Machine learning

Metrics

44
Cited By
8.01
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
41
Refs
0.97
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

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Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
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