For the Sake of Privacy: Skeleton-Based Salient Behavior Recognition

Published in 29th IEEE International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP), 16th -19th October, Bordeaux, France, 2022

Authorities as well as emergency and rescue services have an increasing interest in smart support systems to ensure public safety which includes in particular behavioral analysis of pedestrians by using video surveillance systems. In order to accommodate concerns of citizens regarding their personal rights, the demand for data privacy friendly approaches, using as few information as possible, arises. In this paper, we examine existing approaches tackling the recognition of anomalous or salient behavior based solely on person pose information within the context of real-world surveillance applications. Particularly, we chose two existing state-of-the-art approaches and evaluate them on two public and an internal dataset in order to examine the overall performance of these methods for the desired task. Furthermore, we present our own approach achieving comparable results to these methods. Finally, we extend the aforementioned methods with a memory extension for modeling normal behavior, which yields on average a 4.3% higher recognition performance.