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Towards Building a Visual Behaviour Analysis Pipeline for Suicide Detection and Prevention

Understanding human behaviours through video analysis has seen significant research progress in recent years with the advancement of deep learning. This topic is of great importance to the next generation of intelligent visual surveillance systems which are capable of real-time detection and analysi...

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Autores principales: Li, Xun, Onie, Sandersan, Liang, Morgan, Larsen, Mark, Sowmya, Arcot
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9228922/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35746270
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22124488
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author Li, Xun
Onie, Sandersan
Liang, Morgan
Larsen, Mark
Sowmya, Arcot
author_facet Li, Xun
Onie, Sandersan
Liang, Morgan
Larsen, Mark
Sowmya, Arcot
author_sort Li, Xun
collection PubMed
description Understanding human behaviours through video analysis has seen significant research progress in recent years with the advancement of deep learning. This topic is of great importance to the next generation of intelligent visual surveillance systems which are capable of real-time detection and analysis of human behaviours. One important application is to automatically monitor and detect individuals who are in crisis at suicide hotspots to facilitate early intervention and prevention. However, there is still a significant gap between research in human action recognition and visual video processing in general, and their application to monitor hotspots for suicide prevention. While complex backgrounds, non-rigid movements of pedestrians and limitations of surveillance cameras and multi-task requirements for a surveillance system all pose challenges to the development of such systems, a further challenge is the detection of crisis behaviours before a suicide attempt is made, and there is a paucity of datasets in this area due to privacy and confidentiality issues. Most relevant research only applies to detecting suicides such as hangings or jumps from bridges, providing no potential for early prevention. In this research, these problems are addressed by proposing a new modular design for an intelligent visual processing pipeline that is capable of pedestrian detection, tracking, pose estimation and recognition of both normal actions and high risk behavioural cues that are important indicators of a suicide attempt. Specifically, based on the key finding that human body gestures can be used for the detection of social signals that potentially precede a suicide attempt, a new 2D skeleton-based action recognition algorithm is proposed. By using a two-branch network that takes advantage of three types of skeleton-based features extracted from a sequence of frames and a stacked LSTM structure, the model predicts the action label at each time step. It achieved good performance on both the public dataset JHMDB and a smaller private CCTV footage collection on action recognition. Moreover, a logical layer, which uses knowledge from a human coding study to recognise pre-suicide behaviour indicators, has been built on top of the action recognition module to compensate for the small dataset size. It enables complex behaviour patterns to be recognised even from smaller datasets. The whole pipeline has been tested in a real-world application of suicide prevention using simulated footage from a surveillance system installed at a suicide hotspot, and preliminary results confirm its effectiveness at capturing crisis behaviour indicators for early detection and prevention of suicide.
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spelling pubmed-92289222022-06-25 Towards Building a Visual Behaviour Analysis Pipeline for Suicide Detection and Prevention Li, Xun Onie, Sandersan Liang, Morgan Larsen, Mark Sowmya, Arcot Sensors (Basel) Article Understanding human behaviours through video analysis has seen significant research progress in recent years with the advancement of deep learning. This topic is of great importance to the next generation of intelligent visual surveillance systems which are capable of real-time detection and analysis of human behaviours. One important application is to automatically monitor and detect individuals who are in crisis at suicide hotspots to facilitate early intervention and prevention. However, there is still a significant gap between research in human action recognition and visual video processing in general, and their application to monitor hotspots for suicide prevention. While complex backgrounds, non-rigid movements of pedestrians and limitations of surveillance cameras and multi-task requirements for a surveillance system all pose challenges to the development of such systems, a further challenge is the detection of crisis behaviours before a suicide attempt is made, and there is a paucity of datasets in this area due to privacy and confidentiality issues. Most relevant research only applies to detecting suicides such as hangings or jumps from bridges, providing no potential for early prevention. In this research, these problems are addressed by proposing a new modular design for an intelligent visual processing pipeline that is capable of pedestrian detection, tracking, pose estimation and recognition of both normal actions and high risk behavioural cues that are important indicators of a suicide attempt. Specifically, based on the key finding that human body gestures can be used for the detection of social signals that potentially precede a suicide attempt, a new 2D skeleton-based action recognition algorithm is proposed. By using a two-branch network that takes advantage of three types of skeleton-based features extracted from a sequence of frames and a stacked LSTM structure, the model predicts the action label at each time step. It achieved good performance on both the public dataset JHMDB and a smaller private CCTV footage collection on action recognition. Moreover, a logical layer, which uses knowledge from a human coding study to recognise pre-suicide behaviour indicators, has been built on top of the action recognition module to compensate for the small dataset size. It enables complex behaviour patterns to be recognised even from smaller datasets. The whole pipeline has been tested in a real-world application of suicide prevention using simulated footage from a surveillance system installed at a suicide hotspot, and preliminary results confirm its effectiveness at capturing crisis behaviour indicators for early detection and prevention of suicide. MDPI 2022-06-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9228922/ /pubmed/35746270 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22124488 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Li, Xun
Onie, Sandersan
Liang, Morgan
Larsen, Mark
Sowmya, Arcot
Towards Building a Visual Behaviour Analysis Pipeline for Suicide Detection and Prevention
title Towards Building a Visual Behaviour Analysis Pipeline for Suicide Detection and Prevention
title_full Towards Building a Visual Behaviour Analysis Pipeline for Suicide Detection and Prevention
title_fullStr Towards Building a Visual Behaviour Analysis Pipeline for Suicide Detection and Prevention
title_full_unstemmed Towards Building a Visual Behaviour Analysis Pipeline for Suicide Detection and Prevention
title_short Towards Building a Visual Behaviour Analysis Pipeline for Suicide Detection and Prevention
title_sort towards building a visual behaviour analysis pipeline for suicide detection and prevention
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9228922/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35746270
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22124488
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