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J. Comput. Theor. Appl. - Journal of Computing Theories and Applications - Vol. 2 Issue. 3 (2025)

Human Action Recognition in Military Obstacle Crossing Using HOG and Region-Based Descriptors

Adeola O. Kolawole, Martins E. Irhebhude, Philip O. Odion,



Abstract

Human action recognition involves recognizing and classifying actions performed by humans. It has many applications, including sports, healthcare, and surveillance. Challenges such as a limited number of classes of activities and variations within inter and intra-class groups lead to high misclassification rates in some of the intelligent systems developed. Existing studies focused mainly on using public datasets with little focus on real-life action datasets, with limited research on HAR for military obstacle-crossing activities.  This paper focuses on recognizing human actions in an obstacle-crossing competition video sequence where multiple participants are performing different obstacle-crossing activities. This study proposes a feature descriptor approach that combines a Histogram of Oriented Gradient and Region Descriptors (HOGReG) for human action recognition in a military obstacle crossing competition. The dataset was captured during military trainees’ obstacle-crossing exercises at a military training institution to achieve this objective. Images were segmented into background and foreground using a Grabcut-based segmentation algorithm, and thereafter, features were extracted and used for classification. The features were extracted using a Histogram of Oriented Gradient (HOG) and region descriptors from segmented images. The extracted features are presented to a neural network classifier for classification and evaluation. The experimental results recorded 63.8%, 82.6%, and 86.4% recognition accuracies using the region descriptors HOG and HOGReG, respectively. The region descriptor gave a training time of 5.6048 seconds, while HOG and HOGReG reported 32.233 and 31.975 seconds, respectively. The outcome shows how effectively the suggested model performed.







DOI :


Sitasi :

0

PISSN :

EISSN :

3024-9104

Date.Create Crossref:

21-Feb-2025

Date.Issue :

21-Feb-2025

Date.Publish :

21-Feb-2025

Date.PublishOnline :

21-Feb-2025



PDF File :

Resource :

Open

License :

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0