Trajectory Guided Tracking and Recognition of Actions


Autoria(s): Rosales, Rómer; Sclaroff, Stan
Data(s)

20/10/2011

20/10/2011

09/03/1999

Resumo

A combined 2D, 3D approach is presented that allows for robust tracking of moving people and recognition of actions. It is assumed that the system observes multiple moving objects via a single, uncalibrated video camera. Low-level features are often insufficient for detection, segmentation, and tracking of non-rigid moving objects. Therefore, an improved mechanism is proposed that integrates low-level (image processing), mid-level (recursive 3D trajectory estimation), and high-level (action recognition) processes. A novel extended Kalman filter formulation is used in estimating the relative 3D motion trajectories up to a scale factor. The recursive estimation process provides a prediction and error measure that is exploited in higher-level stages of action recognition. Conversely, higher-level mechanisms provide feedback that allows the system to reliably segment and maintain the tracking of moving objects before, during, and after occlusion. The 3D trajectory, occlusion, and segmentation information are utilized in extracting stabilized views of the moving object that are then used as input to action recognition modules. Trajectory-guided recognition (TGR) is proposed as a new and efficient method for adaptive classification of action. The TGR approach is demonstrated using "motion history images" that are then recognized via a mixture-of-Gaussians classifier. The system was tested in recognizing various dynamic human outdoor activities: running, walking, roller blading, and cycling. Experiments with real and synthetic data sets are used to evaluate stability of the trajectory estimator with respect to noise.

Identificador

Rosales, Romer; Sclaroff, Stan. "Trajectory Guided Tracking and Recognition of Actions", Technical Report BUCS-1999-002, Computer Science Department, Boston University, March 9, 1999. [Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1779]

http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1779

Idioma(s)

en_US

Publicador

Boston University Computer Science Department

Relação

BUCS Technical Reports;BUCS-TR-1999-001

Tipo

Technical Report