This is the demo application for Action Recognition algorithm, which classifies actions that are being performed on input video. The following pre-trained models are delivered with the product:
driver-action-recognition-adas-0002-encoder
+driver-action-recognition-adas-0002-decoder
, which are models for driver monitoring scenario. They recognize actions like safe driving, talking on the phone and othersaction-recognition-0001-encoder
+action-recognition-0001-decoder
andi3d-rgb-tf
, which are general-purpose action recognition (400 actions) models for Kinetics-400 dataset.
For more information about the pre-trained models, refer to the Intel and public models documentation.
The demo pipeline consists of several steps, namely Data
, Model
and Render
.
Every step implements PipelineStep
interface by creating a class derived from PipelineStep
base class. See steps.py
for implementation details.
DataStep
reads frames from the input video.- Model step depends on architecture type:
- For encoder-decoder models there are two steps:
EncoderStep
preprocesses a frame and feeds it to the encoder model to produce a frame embedding. Simple averaging of encoder's outputs over a time window is applied.DecoderStep
feeds embeddings produced by theEncoderStep
to the decoder model and produces predictions. For models that useDummyDecoder
, simple averaging of encoder's outputs over a time window is applied.
- For the specific implemented single models, the corresponding
<ModelNameStep>
does preprocessing and produces predictions.
- For encoder-decoder models there are two steps:
RenderStep
renders prediction results.
Pipeline steps are composed in AsyncPipeline
. Every step can be run in a separate thread by adding it to the pipeline with parallel=True
option.
When two consequent steps occur in separate threads, they communicate via message queue (for example, deliver step result or stop signal).
To ensure maximum performance, models are wrapped in AsyncWrapper
that uses Asynchronous Inference Request API by scheduling infer requests in cyclical order
(inference on every new input is started asynchronously, result of the longest working infer request is returned).
You can change the value of num_requests
in action_recognition_demo.py
to find an optimal number of parallel working infer requests for your inference accelerators
(Intel(R) Neural Compute Stick devices and GPUs benefit from higher number of infer requests).
NOTE: By default, Open Model Zoo demos expect input with BGR channels order. If you trained your model to work with RGB order, you need to manually rearrange the default channels order in the demo application or reconvert your model using the Model Optimizer tool with the
--reverse_input_channels
argument specified. For more information about the argument, refer to When to Reverse Input Channels section of [Embedding Preprocessing Computation](@ref openvino_docs_MO_DG_Additional_Optimization_Use_Cases).
For demo input image or video files, refer to the section Media Files Available for Demos in the Open Model Zoo Demos Overview.
The list of models supported by the demo is in <omz_dir>/demos/action_recognition_demo/python/models.lst
file.
This file can be used as a parameter for Model Downloader and Converter to download and, if necessary, convert models to OpenVINO IR format (*.xml + *.bin).
An example of using the Model Downloader:
omz_downloader --list models.lst
An example of using the Model Converter:
omz_converter --list models.lst
- architecture_type = en-de
- action-recognition-0001-decoder
- action-recognition-0001-encoder
- driver-action-recognition-adas-0002-decoder
- driver-action-recognition-adas-0002-encoder
- architecture_type = en-mean
- weld-porosity-detection-0001
- architecture_type = i3d-rgb
- i3d-rgb-tf
NOTE: Refer to the tables Intel's Pre-Trained Models Device Support and Public Pre-Trained Models Device Support for the details on models inference support at different devices.
Running the application with the -h
option yields the following usage message:
usage: action_recognition_demo.py [-h] -i INPUT [--loop] [-o OUTPUT]
[-limit OUTPUT_LIMIT] -at
{en-de,en-mean,i3d-rgb} -m_en M_ENCODER
[-m_de M_DECODER | --seq DECODER_SEQ_SIZE]
[-d DEVICE] [-lb LABELS]
[--no_show] [-s LABEL_SMOOTHING]
[-u UTILIZATION_MONITORS]
[-r RAW_OUTPUT_MESSAGE]
Options:
-h, --help Show this help message and exit.
-i INPUT, --input INPUT
Required. An input to process. The input must be a
single image, a folder of images, video file or camera
id.
--loop Optional. Enable reading the input in a loop.
-o OUTPUT, --output OUTPUT
Optional. Name of the output file(s) to save.
-limit OUTPUT_LIMIT, --output_limit OUTPUT_LIMIT
Optional. Number of frames to store in output. If 0 is
set, all frames are stored.
-at {en-de,en-mean,i3d-rgb}, --architecture_type {en-de,en-mean,i3d-rgb}
Required. Specify model architecture type.
-m_en M_ENCODER, --m_encoder M_ENCODER
Required. Path to encoder model.
-m_de M_DECODER, --m_decoder M_DECODER
Optional. Path to decoder model. Only for -at en-de.
--seq DECODER_SEQ_SIZE
Optional. Length of sequence that decoder takes as
input.
-d DEVICE, --device DEVICE
Optional. Specify a target device to infer on. CPU,
GPU, HDDL or MYRIAD is acceptable. The demo will
look for a suitable plugin for the device specified.
Default value is CPU.
-lb LABELS, --labels LABELS
Optional. Path to file with label names.
--no_show Optional. Don't show output.
-s LABEL_SMOOTHING, --smooth LABEL_SMOOTHING
Optional. Number of frames used for output label
smoothing.
-u UTILIZATION_MONITORS, --utilization-monitors UTILIZATION_MONITORS
-r, --raw_output_message
Optional. Output inference results raw values showing.
Running the application with an empty list of options yields the usage message given above and an error message.
For example, to run the demo for in-cabin driver monitoring scenario, please provide a path to the encoder and decoder models, an input video and a file with label names, located in the demo folder, <omz_dir>/demos/action_recognition_demo/python/driver_actions.txt
:
python3 action_recognition_demo.py \
-m_en <path_to_model>/driver-action-recognition-adas-0002-encoder.xml \
-m_de <path_to_model>/driver-action-recognition-adas-0002-decoder.xml \
-at en-de \
-i <path_to_video>/inputVideo.mp4 \
-lb <omz_idr>/demos/action_recognition_demo/python/driver_actions.txt
NOTE: If you provide a single image as an input, the demo processes and renders it quickly, then exits. To continuously visualize inference results on the screen, apply the
loop
option, which enforces processing a single image in a loop.
You can save processed results to a Motion JPEG AVI file or separate JPEG or PNG files using the -o
option:
- To save processed results in an AVI file, specify the name of the output file with
avi
extension, for example:-o output.avi
. - To save processed results as images, specify the template name of the output image file with
jpg
orpng
extension, for example:-o output_%03d.jpg
. The actual file names are constructed from the template at runtime by replacing regular expression%03d
with the frame number, resulting in the following:output_000.jpg
,output_001.jpg
, and so on. To avoid disk space overrun in case of continuous input stream, like camera, you can limit the amount of data stored in the output file(s) with thelimit
option. The default value is 1000. To change it, you can apply the-limit N
option, whereN
is the number of frames to store.
NOTE: Windows* systems may not have the Motion JPEG codec installed by default. If this is the case, you can download OpenCV FFMPEG back end using the PowerShell script provided with the OpenVINO ™ install package and located at
<INSTALL_DIR>/opencv/ffmpeg-download.ps1
. The script should be run with administrative privileges if OpenVINO ™ is installed in a system protected folder (this is a typical case). Alternatively, you can save results as images.
The application uses OpenCV to display the real-time action recognition results and current inference performance (in FPS).