Continuous Motion Classification and Segmentation Based on Improved Dynamic Time Warping Algorithm

Author(s):  
Mingqin Liu ◽  
Xiaoguang Zhang ◽  
Guiyun Xu

The continuous image sequence recognition is more difficult than the single image recognition because the classification of continuous image sequences and the image edge recognition must be very accurate. Hence, a method based on sequence alignment for action segmentation and classification is proposed to reconstruct a template sequence by estimating the mean action of a class category, which calculates the distance between a single image and a template sequence by sparse coding in Dynamic Time Warping. The proposed method, the methods of Kulkarni et al. [Continuous action recognition based on sequence alignment, Int. J. Comput. Vis. pp. 1–26.] and Hoai et al. [Joint segmentation and classification of human actions in video, IEEE Conf. Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2008, pp. 108–119.] are compared on the recognition accuracy of the continuous recognition and isolated recognition, which clearly shows that the proposed method outperforms the other methods. When applied to continuous gesture classification, it not only can recognize the gesture categories more quickly and accurately, but is more realistic in solving continuous action recognition problems in a video than the other existing methods.

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (13) ◽  
pp. 4024
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Dmytrów ◽  
Joanna Landmesser ◽  
Beata Bieszk-Stolorz

The main objective of the study is to assess the similarity between the time series of energy commodity prices and the time series of daily COVID-19 cases. The COVID-19 pandemic affects all aspects of the global economy. Although this impact is multifaceted, we assess the connections between the number of COVID-19 cases and the energy commodities sector. We analyse these connections by using the Dynamic Time Warping (DTW) method. On this basis, we calculate the similarity measure—the DTW distance between the time series—and use it to group the energy commodities according to their price change. Our analysis also includes finding the time shifts between daily COVID-19 cases and commodity prices in subperiods according to the chronology of the COVID-19 pandemic. Our findings are that commodities such as ULSD, heating oil, crude oil, and gasoline are weakly associated with COVID-19. On the other hand, natural gas, palm oil, CO2 allowances, and ethanol are strongly associated with the development of the pandemic.


Author(s):  
Kadhum Kareem Al-rubaye ◽  
Oğuz Bayat ◽  
Osman Nuri Ucan ◽  
Dilek Göksel Duru ◽  
Adil Deniz Duru

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document