3,199 research outputs found
3D Human Poses Estimation from a Single 2D Silhouette
This work focuses on the problem of automatically extracting human 3D poses from a single 2D image. By pose we mean the configuration of human bones in order to reconstruct a 3D skeleton representing the 3D posture of the detected human. This problem is highly non-linear in nature and confounds standard regression techniques. Our approach combines prior learned correspondences between silhouettes and skeletons extracted from 3D human models. In order to match detected silhouettes with simulated silhouettes, we used Krawtchouk geometric moment as shape descriptor. We provide quantitative results for image retrieval across different action and subjects, captured from differing viewpoints. We show that our approach gives promising result for 3D pose extraction from a single silhouette
MonoPerfCap: Human Performance Capture from Monocular Video
We present the first marker-less approach for temporally coherent 3D
performance capture of a human with general clothing from monocular video. Our
approach reconstructs articulated human skeleton motion as well as medium-scale
non-rigid surface deformations in general scenes. Human performance capture is
a challenging problem due to the large range of articulation, potentially fast
motion, and considerable non-rigid deformations, even from multi-view data.
Reconstruction from monocular video alone is drastically more challenging,
since strong occlusions and the inherent depth ambiguity lead to a highly
ill-posed reconstruction problem. We tackle these challenges by a novel
approach that employs sparse 2D and 3D human pose detections from a
convolutional neural network using a batch-based pose estimation strategy.
Joint recovery of per-batch motion allows to resolve the ambiguities of the
monocular reconstruction problem based on a low dimensional trajectory
subspace. In addition, we propose refinement of the surface geometry based on
fully automatically extracted silhouettes to enable medium-scale non-rigid
alignment. We demonstrate state-of-the-art performance capture results that
enable exciting applications such as video editing and free viewpoint video,
previously infeasible from monocular video. Our qualitative and quantitative
evaluation demonstrates that our approach significantly outperforms previous
monocular methods in terms of accuracy, robustness and scene complexity that
can be handled.Comment: Accepted to ACM TOG 2018, to be presented on SIGGRAPH 201
LiveCap: Real-time Human Performance Capture from Monocular Video
We present the first real-time human performance capture approach that
reconstructs dense, space-time coherent deforming geometry of entire humans in
general everyday clothing from just a single RGB video. We propose a novel
two-stage analysis-by-synthesis optimization whose formulation and
implementation are designed for high performance. In the first stage, a skinned
template model is jointly fitted to background subtracted input video, 2D and
3D skeleton joint positions found using a deep neural network, and a set of
sparse facial landmark detections. In the second stage, dense non-rigid 3D
deformations of skin and even loose apparel are captured based on a novel
real-time capable algorithm for non-rigid tracking using dense photometric and
silhouette constraints. Our novel energy formulation leverages automatically
identified material regions on the template to model the differing non-rigid
deformation behavior of skin and apparel. The two resulting non-linear
optimization problems per-frame are solved with specially-tailored
data-parallel Gauss-Newton solvers. In order to achieve real-time performance
of over 25Hz, we design a pipelined parallel architecture using the CPU and two
commodity GPUs. Our method is the first real-time monocular approach for
full-body performance capture. Our method yields comparable accuracy with
off-line performance capture techniques, while being orders of magnitude
faster
MoSculp: Interactive Visualization of Shape and Time
We present a system that allows users to visualize complex human motion via
3D motion sculptures---a representation that conveys the 3D structure swept by
a human body as it moves through space. Given an input video, our system
computes the motion sculptures and provides a user interface for rendering it
in different styles, including the options to insert the sculpture back into
the original video, render it in a synthetic scene or physically print it.
To provide this end-to-end workflow, we introduce an algorithm that estimates
that human's 3D geometry over time from a set of 2D images and develop a
3D-aware image-based rendering approach that embeds the sculpture back into the
scene. By automating the process, our system takes motion sculpture creation
out of the realm of professional artists, and makes it applicable to a wide
range of existing video material.
By providing viewers with 3D information, motion sculptures reveal space-time
motion information that is difficult to perceive with the naked eye, and allow
viewers to interpret how different parts of the object interact over time. We
validate the effectiveness of this approach with user studies, finding that our
motion sculpture visualizations are significantly more informative about motion
than existing stroboscopic and space-time visualization methods.Comment: UIST 2018. Project page: http://mosculp.csail.mit.edu
Deep Single-View 3D Object Reconstruction with Visual Hull Embedding
3D object reconstruction is a fundamental task of many robotics and AI
problems. With the aid of deep convolutional neural networks (CNNs), 3D object
reconstruction has witnessed a significant progress in recent years. However,
possibly due to the prohibitively high dimension of the 3D object space, the
results from deep CNNs are often prone to missing some shape details. In this
paper, we present an approach which aims to preserve more shape details and
improve the reconstruction quality. The key idea of our method is to leverage
object mask and pose estimation from CNNs to assist the 3D shape learning by
constructing a probabilistic single-view visual hull inside of the network. Our
method works by first predicting a coarse shape as well as the object pose and
silhouette using CNNs, followed by a novel 3D refinement CNN which refines the
coarse shapes using the constructed probabilistic visual hulls. Experiment on
both synthetic data and real images show that embedding a single-view visual
hull for shape refinement can significantly improve the reconstruction quality
by recovering more shapes details and improving shape consistency with the
input image.Comment: 11 page
Learning to Reconstruct People in Clothing from a Single RGB Camera
We present a learning-based model to infer the personalized 3D shape of people from a few frames (1-8) of a monocular video in which the person is moving, in less than 10 seconds with a reconstruction accuracy of 5mm. Our model learns to predict the parameters of a statistical body model and instance displacements that add clothing and hair to the shape. The model achieves fast and accurate predictions based on two key design choices. First, by predicting shape in a canonical T-pose space, the network learns to encode the images of the person into pose-invariant latent codes, where the information is fused. Second, based on the observation that feed-forward predictions are fast but do not always align with the input images, we predict using both, bottom-up and top-down streams (one per view) allowing information to flow in both directions. Learning relies only on synthetic 3D data. Once learned, the model can take a variable number of frames as input, and is able to reconstruct shapes even from a single image with an accuracy of 6mm. Results on 3 different datasets demonstrate the efficacy and accuracy of our approach
Pix3D: Dataset and Methods for Single-Image 3D Shape Modeling
We study 3D shape modeling from a single image and make contributions to it
in three aspects. First, we present Pix3D, a large-scale benchmark of diverse
image-shape pairs with pixel-level 2D-3D alignment. Pix3D has wide applications
in shape-related tasks including reconstruction, retrieval, viewpoint
estimation, etc. Building such a large-scale dataset, however, is highly
challenging; existing datasets either contain only synthetic data, or lack
precise alignment between 2D images and 3D shapes, or only have a small number
of images. Second, we calibrate the evaluation criteria for 3D shape
reconstruction through behavioral studies, and use them to objectively and
systematically benchmark cutting-edge reconstruction algorithms on Pix3D.
Third, we design a novel model that simultaneously performs 3D reconstruction
and pose estimation; our multi-task learning approach achieves state-of-the-art
performance on both tasks.Comment: CVPR 2018. The first two authors contributed equally to this work.
Project page: http://pix3d.csail.mit.ed
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