Lifelong learning of human actions with deep neural network self-organization.

Journal: Neural networks : the official journal of the International Neural Network Society
Published Date:

Abstract

Lifelong learning is fundamental in autonomous robotics for the acquisition and fine-tuning of knowledge through experience. However, conventional deep neural models for action recognition from videos do not account for lifelong learning but rather learn a batch of training data with a predefined number of action classes and samples. Thus, there is the need to develop learning systems with the ability to incrementally process available perceptual cues and to adapt their responses over time. We propose a self-organizing neural architecture for incrementally learning to classify human actions from video sequences. The architecture comprises growing self-organizing networks equipped with recurrent neurons for processing time-varying patterns. We use a set of hierarchically arranged recurrent networks for the unsupervised learning of action representations with increasingly large spatiotemporal receptive fields. Lifelong learning is achieved in terms of prediction-driven neural dynamics in which the growth and the adaptation of the recurrent networks are driven by their capability to reconstruct temporally ordered input sequences. Experimental results on a classification task using two action benchmark datasets show that our model is competitive with state-of-the-art methods for batch learning also when a significant number of sample labels are missing or corrupted during training sessions. Additional experiments show the ability of our model to adapt to non-stationary input avoiding catastrophic interference.

Authors

  • German I Parisi
    Knowledge Technology Institute, Department of Informatics, University of Hamburg, Germany. Electronic address: parisi@informatik.uni-hamburg.de.
  • Jun Tani
    Department of Electrical Engineering, KAIST, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, Republic of Korea. Electronic address: tani1216jp@gmail.com.
  • Cornelius Weber
    Department of Informatics, University of Hamburg, Knowledge Technology, Vogt-Koelln-Strasse 30, 22527 Hamburg, Germany. Electronic address: weber@informatik.uni-hamburg.de.
  • Stefan Wermter
    University of Hamburg, Department of Informatics, Knowledge Technology, WTM, Vogt-Kölln-Straße 30, 22527 Hamburg, Germany. Electronic address: wermter@informatik.uni-hamburg.de.