• Media type: Electronic Conference Proceeding; E-Article; Text
  • Title: A Neuro-Symbolic Approach to Structured Event Recognition
  • Contributor: Apriceno, Gianluca [Author]; Passerini, Andrea [Author]; Serafini, Luciano [Author]
  • imprint: Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2021
  • Language: English
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.TIME.2021.11
  • Keywords: learning and reasoning ; Event recognition ; neuro-symbolic integration
  • Origination:
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  • Description: Events are structured entities with multiple components: the event type, the participants with their roles, the outcome, the sub-events etc. A fully end-to-end approach for event recognition from raw data sequence, therefore, should also solve a number of simpler tasks like recognizing the objects involved in the events and their roles, the outcome of the events as well as the sub-events. Ontological knowledge about event structure, specified in logic languages, could be very useful to solve the aforementioned challenges. However, the majority of successful approaches in event recognition from raw data are based on purely neural approaches (mainly recurrent neural networks), with limited, if any, support for background knowledge. These approaches typically require large training sets with detailed annotations at the different levels in which recognition can be decomposed (e.g., video annotated with object bounding boxes, object roles, events and sub-events). In this paper, we propose a neuro-symbolic approach for structured event recognition from raw data that uses "shallow" annotation on the high-level events and exploits background knowledge to propagate this supervision to simpler tasks such as object classification. We develop a prototype of the approach and compare it with a purely neural solution based on recurrent neural networks, showing the higher capability of solving both the event recognition task and the simpler task of object classification, as well as the ability to generalize to events with unseen outcomes.
  • Access State: Open Access