1,063 research outputs found

    Towards an Interactive Humanoid Companion with Visual Tracking Modalities

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    The idea of robots acting as human companions is not a particularly new or original one. Since the notion of “robot ” was created, the idea of robots replacing humans in dangerous, dirty and dull activities has been inseparably tied with the fantasy of human-like robots being friends and existing side by side with humans. In 1989, Engelberger (Engelberger

    Robust infants face tracking using active appearance models: a mixed-state CONDENSATION approach

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    In this paper a new extension of the CONDENSATION algorithm, with application to infants face tracking, will be introduced. In this work we address the problem of tracking a face and its features in baby video sequences. A mixed state particle filtering scheme is proposed, where the distribution of observations is derived from an active appearance model. The mixed state approach combines several dynamic models in order to account for different occlusion situations. Experiments on real video show that the proposed approach augments the tracker robustness to occlusions while maintaining the computational time competitive

    Particle Filters for Colour-Based Face Tracking Under Varying Illumination

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    Automatic human face tracking is the basis of robotic and active vision systems used for facial feature analysis, automatic surveillance, video conferencing, intelligent transportation, human-computer interaction and many other applications. Superior human face tracking will allow future safety surveillance systems which monitor drowsy drivers, or patients and elderly people at the risk of seizure or sudden falls and will perform with lower risk of failure in unexpected situations. This area has actively been researched in the current literature in an attempt to make automatic face trackers more stable in challenging real-world environments. To detect faces in video sequences, features like colour, texture, intensity, shape or motion is used. Among these feature colour has been the most popular, because of its insensitivity to orientation and size changes and fast process-ability. The challenge of colour-based face trackers, however, has been dealing with the instability of trackers in case of colour changes due to the drastic variation in environmental illumination. Probabilistic tracking and the employment of particle filters as powerful Bayesian stochastic estimators, on the other hand, is increasing in the visual tracking field thanks to their ability to handle multi-modal distributions in cluttered scenes. Traditional particle filters utilize transition prior as importance sampling function, but this can result in poor posterior sampling. The objective of this research is to investigate and propose stable face tracker capable of dealing with challenges like rapid and random motion of head, scale changes when people are moving closer or further from the camera, motion of multiple people with close skin tones in the vicinity of the model person, presence of clutter and occlusion of face. The main focus has been on investigating an efficient method to address the sensitivity of the colour-based trackers in case of gradual or drastic illumination variations. The particle filter is used to overcome the instability of face trackers due to nonlinear and random head motions. To increase the traditional particle filter\u27s sampling efficiency an improved version of the particle filter is introduced that considers the latest measurements. This improved particle filter employs a new colour-based bottom-up approach that leads particles to generate an effective proposal distribution. The colour-based bottom-up approach is a classification technique for fast skin colour segmentation. This method is independent to distribution shape and does not require excessive memory storage or exhaustive prior training. Finally, to address the adaptability of the colour-based face tracker to illumination changes, an original likelihood model is proposed based of spatial rank information that considers both the illumination invariant colour ordering of a face\u27s pixels in an image or video frame and the spatial interaction between them. The original contribution of this work lies in the unique mixture of existing and proposed components to improve colour-base recognition and tracking of faces in complex scenes, especially where drastic illumination changes occur. Experimental results of the final version of the proposed face tracker, which combines the methods developed, are provided in the last chapter of this manuscript

    Recognition of Deictic Gestures for Wearable Computing

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    Object localisation via action recognition

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    The aim of this paper is to track objects during their use by humans. The task is difficult because these objects are small, fast-moving and often occluded by the user. We present a novel solution based on cascade action recognition, a learned mapping between body-and object-poses, and a hierarchical extension of importance sampling. During tracking, body pose estimates from a Kinect sensor are classified between action classes by a Support Vector Machine and converted to discriminative object pose hypotheses using a {body, object} pose mapping. They are then mixed with generative hypotheses by the importance sampler and evaluated against the image. The approach out-performs a state of the art adaptive tracker for localisation of 14/15 test implements and additionally gives object classifications and 3D object pose estimates

    Real-time visual tracking using image processing and filtering methods

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    The main goal of this thesis is to develop real-time computer vision algorithms in order to detect and to track targets in uncertain complex environments purely based on a visual sensor. Two major subjects addressed by this work are: 1. The development of fast and robust image segmentation algorithms that are able to search and automatically detect targets in a given image. 2. The development of sound filtering algorithms to reduce the effects of noise in signals from the image processing. The main constraint of this research is that the algorithms should work in real-time with limited computing power on an onboard computer in an aircraft. In particular, we focus on contour tracking which tracks the outline of the target represented by contours in the image plane. This thesis is concerned with three specific categories, namely image segmentation, shape modeling, and signal filtering. We have designed image segmentation algorithms based on geometric active contours implemented via level set methods. Geometric active contours are deformable contours that automatically track the outlines of objects in images. In this approach, the contour in the image plane is represented as the zero-level set of a higher dimensional function. (One example of the higher dimensional function is a three-dimensional surface for a two-dimensional contour.) This approach handles the topological changes (e.g., merging, splitting) of the contour naturally. Although geometric active contours prevail in many fields of computer vision, they suffer from the high computational costs associated with level set methods. Therefore, simplified versions of level set methods such as fast marching methods are often used in problems of real-time visual tracking. This thesis presents the development of a fast and robust segmentation algorithm based on up-to-date extensions of level set methods and geometric active contours, namely a fast implementation of Chan-Vese's (active contour) model (FICVM). The shape prior is a useful cue in the recognition of the true target. For the contour tracker, the outline of the target can be easily disrupted by noise. In geometric active contours, to cope with deviations from the true outline of the target, a higher dimensional function is constructed based on the shape prior, and the contour tracks the outline of an object by considering the difference between the higher dimensional functions obtained from the shape prior and from a measurement in a given image. The higher dimensional function is often a distance map which requires high computational costs for construction. This thesis focuses on the extraction of shape information from only the zero-level set of the higher dimensional function. This strategy compensates for inaccuracies in the calculation of the shape difference that occur when a simplified higher dimensional function is used. This is named as contour-based shape modeling. Filtering is an essential element in tracking problems because of the presence of noise in system models and measurements. The well-known Kalman filter provides an exact solution only for problems which have linear models and Gaussian distributions (linear/Gaussian problems). For nonlinear/non-Gaussian problems, particle filters have received much attention in recent years. Particle filtering is useful in the approximation of complicated posterior probability distribution functions. However, the computational burden of particle filtering prevents it from performing at full capacity in real-time applications. This thesis concentrates on improving the processing time of particle filtering for real-time applications. In principle, we follow the particle filter in the geometric active contour framework. This thesis proposes an advanced blob tracking scheme in which a blob contains shape prior information of the target. This scheme simplifies the sampling process and quickly suggests the samples which have a high probability of being the target. Only for these samples is the contour tracking algorithm applied to obtain a more detailed state estimate. Curve evolution in the contour tracking is realized by the FICVM. The dissimilarity measure is calculated by the contour based shape modeling method and the shape prior is updated when it satisfies certain conditions. The new particle filter is applied to the problems of low contrast and severe daylight conditions, to cluttered environments, and to the appearing/disappearing target tracking. We have also demonstrated the utility of the filtering algorithm for multiple target tracking in the presence of occlusions. This thesis presents several test results from simulations and flight tests. In these tests, the proposed algorithms demonstrated promising results in varied situations of tracking.Ph.D.Committee Chair: Eric N. Johnson; Committee Co-Chair: Allen R. Tannenbaum; Committee Member: Anthony J. Calise; Committee Member: Eric Feron; Committee Member: Patricio A. Vel
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