Explainable Activity Recognition in Videos using Deep Learning and Tractable Probabilistic Models

Author:

Roy Chiradeep1ORCID,Nourani Mahsan2ORCID,Arya Shivvrat1ORCID,Shanbhag Mahesh1ORCID,Rahman Tahrima1ORCID,Ragan Eric D.2ORCID,Ruozzi Nicholas1ORCID,Gogate Vibhav1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Texas at Dallas, USA

2. University of Florida, USA

Abstract

We consider the following video activity recognition (VAR) task: given a video, infer the set of activities being performed in the video and assign each frame to an activity. Although VAR can be solved accurately using existing deep learning techniques, deep networks are neither interpretable nor explainable and as a result their use is problematic in high stakes decision-making applications (in healthcare, experimental Biology, aviation, law, etc.). In such applications, failure may lead to disastrous consequences and therefore it is necessary that the user is able to either understand the inner workings of the model or probe it to understand its reasoning patterns for a given decision. We address these limitations of deep networks by proposing a new approach that feeds the output of a deep model into a tractable, interpretable probabilistic model called a dynamic conditional cutset network that is defined over the explanatory and output variables and then performing joint inference over the combined model. The two key benefits of using cutset networks are: (a) they explicitly model the relationship between the output and explanatory variables and as a result, the combined model is likely to be more accurate than the vanilla deep model and (b) they can answer reasoning queries in polynomial time and as a result, they can derive meaningful explanations by efficiently answering explanation queries. We demonstrate the efficacy of our approach on two datasets, Textually Annotated Cooking Scenes (TACoS), and wet lab, using conventional evaluation measures such as the Jaccard Index and Hamming Loss, as well as a human-subjects study.

Funder

DARPA Explainable Artificial Intelligence

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Human-Computer Interaction

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