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Recognizing human activity using RGBD data
textTraditional computer vision algorithms try to understand the world using visible light cameras. However, there are inherent limitations of this type of data source. First, visible light images are sensitive to illumination changes and background clutter. Second, the 3D structural information of the scene is lost when projecting the 3D world to 2D images. Recovering the 3D information from 2D images is a challenging problem. Range sensors have existed for over thirty years, which capture 3D characteristics of the scene. However, earlier range sensors were either too expensive, difficult to use in human environments, slow at acquiring data, or provided a poor estimation of distance. Recently, the easy access to the RGBD data at real-time frame rate is leading to a revolution in perception and inspired many new research using RGBD data. I propose algorithms to detect persons and understand the activities using RGBD data. I demonstrate the solutions to many computer vision problems may be improved with the added depth channel. The 3D structural information may give rise to algorithms with real-time and view-invariant properties in a faster and easier fashion. When both data sources are available, the features extracted from the depth channel may be combined with traditional features computed from RGB channels to generate more robust systems with enhanced recognition abilities, which may be able to deal with more challenging scenarios. As a starting point, the first problem is to find the persons of various poses in the scene, including moving or static persons. Localizing humans from RGB images is limited by the lighting conditions and background clutter. Depth image gives alternative ways to find the humans in the scene. In the past, detection of humans from range data is usually achieved by tracking, which does not work for indoor person detection. In this thesis, I propose a model based approach to detect the persons using the structural information embedded in the depth image. I propose a 2D head contour model and a 3D head surface model to look for the head-shoulder part of the person. Then, a segmentation scheme is proposed to segment the full human body from the background and extract the contour. I also give a tracking algorithm based on the detection result. I further research on recognizing human actions and activities. I propose two features for recognizing human activities. The first feature is drawn from the skeletal joint locations estimated from a depth image. It is a compact representation of the human posture called histograms of 3D joint locations (HOJ3D). This representation is view-invariant and the whole algorithm runs at real-time. This feature may benefit many applications to get a fast estimation of the posture and action of the human subject. The second feature is a spatio-temporal feature for depth video, which is called Depth Cuboid Similarity Feature (DCSF). The interest points are extracted using an algorithm that effectively suppresses the noise and finds salient human motions. DCSF is extracted centered on each interest point, which forms the description of the video contents. This descriptor can be used to recognize the activities with no dependence on skeleton information or pre-processing steps such as motion segmentation, tracking, or even image de-noising or hole-filling. It is more flexible and widely applicable to many scenarios. Finally, all the features herein developed are combined to solve a novel problem: first-person human activity recognition using RGBD data. Traditional activity recognition algorithms focus on recognizing activities from a third-person perspective. I propose to recognize activities from a first-person perspective with RGBD data. This task is very novel and extremely challenging due to the large amount of camera motion either due to self exploration or the response of the interaction. I extracted 3D optical flow features as the motion descriptor, 3D skeletal joints features as posture descriptors, spatio-temporal features as local appearance descriptors to describe the first-person videos. To address the ego-motion of the camera, I propose an attention mask to guide the recognition procedures and separate the features on the ego-motion region and independent-motion region. The 3D features are very useful at summarizing the discerning information of the activities. In addition, the combination of the 3D features with existing 2D features brings more robust recognition results and make the algorithm capable of dealing with more challenging cases.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
Efficient Human Activity Recognition in Large Image and Video Databases
Vision-based human action recognition has attracted considerable interest in recent research for its applications to video surveillance, content-based search, healthcare, and interactive games. Most existing research deals with building informative feature descriptors, designing efficient and robust algorithms, proposing versatile and challenging datasets, and fusing multiple modalities. Often, these approaches build on certain conventions such as the use of motion cues to determine video descriptors, application of off-the-shelf classifiers, and single-factor classification of videos. In this thesis, we deal with important but overlooked issues such as efficiency, simplicity, and scalability of human activity recognition in different application scenarios: controlled video environment (e.g.~indoor surveillance), unconstrained videos (e.g.~YouTube), depth or skeletal data (e.g.~captured by Kinect), and person images (e.g.~Flicker). In particular, we are interested in answering questions like (a) is it possible to efficiently recognize human actions in controlled videos without temporal cues? (b) given that the large-scale unconstrained video data are often of high dimension low sample size (HDLSS) nature, how to efficiently recognize human actions in such data? (c) considering the rich 3D motion information available from depth or motion capture sensors, is it possible to recognize both the actions and the actors using only the motion dynamics of underlying activities? and (d) can motion information from monocular videos be used for automatically determining saliency regions for recognizing actions in still images
RGB-D datasets using microsoft kinect or similar sensors: a survey
RGB-D data has turned out to be a very useful representation of an indoor scene for solving fundamental computer vision problems. It takes the advantages of the color image that provides appearance information of an object and also the depth image that is immune to the variations in color, illumination, rotation angle and scale. With the invention of the low-cost Microsoft Kinect sensor, which was initially used for gaming and later became a popular device for computer vision, high quality RGB-D data can be acquired easily. In recent years, more and more RGB-D image/video datasets dedicated to various applications have become available, which are of great importance to benchmark the state-of-the-art. In this paper, we systematically survey popular RGB-D datasets for different applications including object recognition, scene classification, hand gesture recognition, 3D-simultaneous localization and mapping, and pose estimation. We provide the insights into the characteristics of each important dataset, and compare the popularity and the difficulty of those datasets. Overall, the main goal of this survey is to give a comprehensive description about the available RGB-D datasets and thus to guide researchers in the selection of suitable datasets for evaluating their algorithms
Unsupervised Learning of Long-Term Motion Dynamics for Videos
We present an unsupervised representation learning approach that compactly
encodes the motion dependencies in videos. Given a pair of images from a video
clip, our framework learns to predict the long-term 3D motions. To reduce the
complexity of the learning framework, we propose to describe the motion as a
sequence of atomic 3D flows computed with RGB-D modality. We use a Recurrent
Neural Network based Encoder-Decoder framework to predict these sequences of
flows. We argue that in order for the decoder to reconstruct these sequences,
the encoder must learn a robust video representation that captures long-term
motion dependencies and spatial-temporal relations. We demonstrate the
effectiveness of our learned temporal representations on activity
classification across multiple modalities and datasets such as NTU RGB+D and
MSR Daily Activity 3D. Our framework is generic to any input modality, i.e.,
RGB, Depth, and RGB-D videos.Comment: CVPR 201
RGBD Datasets: Past, Present and Future
Since the launch of the Microsoft Kinect, scores of RGBD datasets have been
released. These have propelled advances in areas from reconstruction to gesture
recognition. In this paper we explore the field, reviewing datasets across
eight categories: semantics, object pose estimation, camera tracking, scene
reconstruction, object tracking, human actions, faces and identification. By
extracting relevant information in each category we help researchers to find
appropriate data for their needs, and we consider which datasets have succeeded
in driving computer vision forward and why.
Finally, we examine the future of RGBD datasets. We identify key areas which
are currently underexplored, and suggest that future directions may include
synthetic data and dense reconstructions of static and dynamic scenes.Comment: 8 pages excluding references (CVPR style
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