Back to Search
Start Over
Predicting Intentions from Motion: The Subject-Adversarial Adaptation Approach
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- This paper aims at investigating the action prediction problem from a pure kinematic perspective. Specifically, we address the problem of recognizing future actions, indeed human intentions, underlying a same initial (and apparently unrelated) motor act. This study is inspired by neuroscientific findings asserting that motor acts at the very onset are embedding information about the intention with which are performed, even when different intentions originate from a same class of movements. To demonstrate this claim in computational and empirical terms, we designed an ad hoc experiment and built a new 3D and 2D dataset where, in both training and testing, we analyze a same class of grasping movements underlying different intentions. We investigate how much the intention discriminants generalize across subjects, discovering that each subject tends to affect the prediction by his/her own bias. Inspired by the domain adaptation problem, we propose to interpret each subject as a domain, leading to a novel subject adversarial paradigm. The proposed approach favorably copes with our new problem, boosting the considered baseline features encoding 2D and 3D information and which do not exploit the subject information.
- Subjects :
- Boosting (machine learning)
Grasping
Exploit
Computer science
02 engineering and technology
Motion (physics)
Action recognition and prediction
03 medical and health sciences
Adversarial system
0302 clinical medicine
Human intentions
Artificial Intelligence
0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering
Adaptation (computer science)
Class (computer programming)
action recognition
Perspective (graphical)
Kinematic analysis
Intention prediction, action recognition
Adversarial domain adaptation
Intention prediction
Pattern recognition (psychology)
020201 artificial intelligence & image processing
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Software
Cognitive psychology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....751877a86b6774a3e9c1ea36a95a2d07