27,508 research outputs found

    CDBMGCIG: Design of a Cross-Domain Bioinspired Model for identification of Gait Components via Iterated GANs

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    This Gait identification assists in recognition of human body components from temporal image sequences. Such components consist of connected-body entities including head, upper body, lower body regions. Existing Gait recognition models use deep learning methods including variants of Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs), Q-Learning, etc. But these methods are either highly complex, or do not perform well under complex background conditions. Moreover, most of these models are validated on a specific environmental condition, and cannot be scaled for general-purpose deployments. To overcome these issues, this text proposes design of a novel cross-domain bioinspired model for identification of gait components via Iterated Generative Adversarial Networks (IGANs). The proposed model initially extracts multidomain pixel-level feature sets from different images. These include frequency components via Fourier analysis, entropy components via Cosine analysis, spatial components via Gabor analysis, and window-based components via Wavelet &Convolutional analysis. These feature sets are processed via a Grey Wolf Optimization (GWO) Model, which assists in identification of high-density & highly variant features for different gait components. These features are classified via an iterated GAN, which comprises of Generator & Discriminator ssModels that assist in evaluating connected body components. These operations generate component-level scores that assist in identification of gait from complex background images. Due to which, the proposed model was observed to achieve 9.5% higher accuracy, 3.4% higher precision, and 2.9% higher recall than existing gait identification methods. The model also uses iterative learning, due to which its accuracy is incrementally improved w.r.t. number of evaluated image sets

    Extraction of bodily features for gait recognition and gait attractiveness evaluation

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    This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11042-012-1319-2. Copyright @ 2012 Springer.Although there has been much previous research on which bodily features are most important in gait analysis, the questions of which features should be extracted from gait, and why these features in particular should be extracted, have not been convincingly answered. The primary goal of the study reported here was to take an analytical approach to answering these questions, in the context of identifying the features that are most important for gait recognition and gait attractiveness evaluation. Using precise 3D gait motion data obtained from motion capture, we analyzed the relative motions from different body segments to a root marker (located on the lower back) of 30 males by the fixed root method, and compared them with the original motions without fixing root. Some particular features were obtained by principal component analysis (PCA). The left lower arm, lower legs and hips were identified as important features for gait recognition. For gait attractiveness evaluation, the lower legs were recognized as important features.Dorothy Hodgkin Postgraduate Award and HEFCE

    2.5D multi-view gait recognition based on point cloud registration

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    This paper presents a method for modeling a 2.5-dimensional (2.5D) human body and extracting the gait features for identifying the human subject. To achieve view-invariant gait recognition, a multi-view synthesizing method based on point cloud registration (MVSM) to generate multi-view training galleries is proposed. The concept of a density and curvature-based Color Gait Curvature Image is introduced to map 2.5D data onto a 2D space to enable data dimension reduction by discrete cosine transform and 2D principle component analysis. Gait recognition is achieved via a 2.5D view-invariant gait recognition method based on point cloud registration. Experimental results on the in-house database captured by a Microsoft Kinect camera show a significant performance gain when using MVSM

    Gait Recognition By Walking and Running: A Model-Based Approach

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    Gait is an emerging biometric for which some techniques, mainly holistic, have been developed to recognise people by their walking patterns. However, the possibility of recognising people by the way they run remains largely unexplored. The new analytical model presented in this paper is based on the biomechanics of walking and running, and will serve as the foundation of an automatic person recognition system that is invariant to these distinct gaits. A bilateral and dynamically coupled oscillator is the key concept underlying this work. Analysis shows that this new model can be used to automatically describe walking and running subjects without parameter selection. Temporal template matching that takes into account the whole sequence of a gait cycle is applied to extract the angles of thigh and lower leg rotation. The phase-weighted magnitudes of the lower order Fourier components of these rotations form the gait signature. Classification of walking and running subjects is performed using the k-nearest-neighbour classifier. Recognition rates are similar to that achieved by other techniques with a similarly sized database. Future work will investigate feature set selection to improve the recognition rate and will determine the invariance attributes, for inter- and intra- class, of both walking and running
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