Abnormal Event Detection In Video
Abnormal Event Detection In Video is a challenging task in computer vision, as the definition of what an abnormal event looks like depends very much on the context. For instance, a car driving by on the street is regarded as a normal event, but if the car enters a pedestrian area, this is regarded as an abnormal event. A person running on a sports court (normal event) versus running outside from a bank (abnormal event) is another example. Although what is considered abnormal depends on the context, we can generally agree that abnormal events should be unexpected events that occur less often than familiar (normal) events
Source: Unmasking the abnormal events in video
Image: Ravanbakhsh et al
Papers
Showing 1–10 of 17 papers
Benchmark Results
| # | Model | Metric | Claimed | Verified | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GMM | AUC | 0.91 | — | Unverified |
| 2 | Sultani et al. | AUC | 0.89 | — | Unverified |
| 3 | Sultani et al. | AUC | 0.79 | — | Unverified |
| 4 | s2-VAE | AUC | 0.61 | — | Unverified |
| 5 | LSTM-VAE | AUC | 0.54 | — | Unverified |
| 6 | Adversarial Generator | AUC | 0.53 | — | Unverified |
| 7 | Hasan et al. | AUC | 0.53 | — | Unverified |