Inferring Body Pose without Tracking Body Parts


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

20/10/2011

20/10/2011

01/12/1999

Resumo

A novel approach for estimating articulated body posture and motion from monocular video sequences is proposed. Human pose is defined as the instantaneous two dimensional configuration (i.e., the projection onto the image plane) of a single articulated body in terms of the position of a predetermined set of joints. First, statistical segmentation of the human bodies from the background is performed and low-level visual features are found given the segmented body shape. The goal is to be able to map these, generally low level, visual features to body configurations. The system estimates different mappings, each one with a specific cluster in the visual feature space. Given a set of body motion sequences for training, unsupervised clustering is obtained via the Expectation Maximation algorithm. Then, for each of the clusters, a function is estimated to build the mapping between low-level features to 3D pose. Currently this mapping is modeled by a neural network. Given new visual features, a mapping from each cluster is performed to yield a set of possible poses. From this set, the system selects the most likely pose given the learned probability distribution and the visual feature similarity between hypothesis and input. Performance of the proposed approach is characterized using a new set of known body postures, showing promising results.

Office of Naval Research (Young Investigator Award, N00014-96-1-066); National Science Foundation (IIS-962416, EIA-962386)

Identificador

Rosales, Romer; Sclaroff, Stan. "Inferring Body Pose without Tracking Body Parts", Technical Report BUCS-1999-017, Computer Science Department, Boston University, December 1, 1999. [Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1794]

http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1794

Idioma(s)

en_US

Publicador

Boston University Computer Science Department

Relação

BUCS Technical Reports;BUCS-TR-1998-017

Tipo

Technical Report