52,847 research outputs found
Exploiting temporal information for 3D pose estimation
In this work, we address the problem of 3D human pose estimation from a
sequence of 2D human poses. Although the recent success of deep networks has
led many state-of-the-art methods for 3D pose estimation to train deep networks
end-to-end to predict from images directly, the top-performing approaches have
shown the effectiveness of dividing the task of 3D pose estimation into two
steps: using a state-of-the-art 2D pose estimator to estimate the 2D pose from
images and then mapping them into 3D space. They also showed that a
low-dimensional representation like 2D locations of a set of joints can be
discriminative enough to estimate 3D pose with high accuracy. However,
estimation of 3D pose for individual frames leads to temporally incoherent
estimates due to independent error in each frame causing jitter. Therefore, in
this work we utilize the temporal information across a sequence of 2D joint
locations to estimate a sequence of 3D poses. We designed a
sequence-to-sequence network composed of layer-normalized LSTM units with
shortcut connections connecting the input to the output on the decoder side and
imposed temporal smoothness constraint during training. We found that the
knowledge of temporal consistency improves the best reported result on
Human3.6M dataset by approximately and helps our network to recover
temporally consistent 3D poses over a sequence of images even when the 2D pose
detector fails
Deep Autoencoder for Combined Human Pose Estimation and body Model Upscaling
We present a method for simultaneously estimating 3D human pose and body
shape from a sparse set of wide-baseline camera views. We train a symmetric
convolutional autoencoder with a dual loss that enforces learning of a latent
representation that encodes skeletal joint positions, and at the same time
learns a deep representation of volumetric body shape. We harness the latter to
up-scale input volumetric data by a factor of , whilst recovering a
3D estimate of joint positions with equal or greater accuracy than the state of
the art. Inference runs in real-time (25 fps) and has the potential for passive
human behaviour monitoring where there is a requirement for high fidelity
estimation of human body shape and pose
Modelling potential movement in constrained travel environments using rough space-time prisms
The widespread adoption of location-aware technologies (LATs) has afforded analysts new opportunities for efficiently collecting trajectory data of moving individuals. These technologies enable measuring trajectories as a finite sample set of time-stamped locations. The uncertainty related to both finite sampling and measurement errors makes it often difficult to reconstruct and represent a trajectory followed by an individual in space-time. Time geography offers an interesting framework to deal with the potential path of an individual in between two sample locations. Although this potential path may be easily delineated for travels along networks, this will be less straightforward for more nonnetwork-constrained environments. Current models, however, have mostly concentrated on network environments on the one hand and do not account for the spatiotemporal uncertainties of input data on the other hand. This article simultaneously addresses both issues by developing a novel methodology to capture potential movement between uncertain space-time points in obstacle-constrained travel environments
Sparse Inertial Poser: Automatic 3D Human Pose Estimation from Sparse IMUs
We address the problem of making human motion capture in the wild more
practical by using a small set of inertial sensors attached to the body. Since
the problem is heavily under-constrained, previous methods either use a large
number of sensors, which is intrusive, or they require additional video input.
We take a different approach and constrain the problem by: (i) making use of a
realistic statistical body model that includes anthropometric constraints and
(ii) using a joint optimization framework to fit the model to orientation and
acceleration measurements over multiple frames. The resulting tracker Sparse
Inertial Poser (SIP) enables 3D human pose estimation using only 6 sensors
(attached to the wrists, lower legs, back and head) and works for arbitrary
human motions. Experiments on the recently released TNT15 dataset show that,
using the same number of sensors, SIP achieves higher accuracy than the dataset
baseline without using any video data. We further demonstrate the effectiveness
of SIP on newly recorded challenging motions in outdoor scenarios such as
climbing or jumping over a wall.Comment: 12 pages, Accepted at Eurographics 201
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