5,283 research outputs found
Automatic recognition of fingerspelled words in British Sign Language
We investigate the problem of recognizing words from
video, fingerspelled using the British Sign Language (BSL)
fingerspelling alphabet. This is a challenging task since the
BSL alphabet involves both hands occluding each other, and
contains signs which are ambiguous from the observer’s
viewpoint. The main contributions of our work include:
(i) recognition based on hand shape alone, not requiring
motion cues; (ii) robust visual features for hand shape
recognition; (iii) scalability to large lexicon recognition
with no re-training.
We report results on a dataset of 1,000 low quality webcam
videos of 100 words. The proposed method achieves a
word recognition accuracy of 98.9%
3D face tracking and multi-scale, spatio-temporal analysis of linguistically significant facial expressions and head positions in ASL
Essential grammatical information is conveyed in signed languages by clusters of events involving facial expressions and movements of the head and upper body. This poses a significant challenge for computer-based sign language recognition. Here, we present new methods for the recognition of nonmanual grammatical markers in American Sign Language (ASL) based on: (1) new 3D tracking methods for the estimation of 3D head pose and facial expressions to determine the relevant low-level features; (2) methods for higher-level analysis of component events (raised/lowered eyebrows, periodic head nods and head shakes) used in grammatical markings—with differentiation of temporal phases (onset, core, offset, where appropriate), analysis of their characteristic properties, and extraction of corresponding features; (3) a 2-level learning framework to combine lowand high-level features of differing spatio-temporal scales. This new approach achieves significantly better tracking and recognition results than our previous methods
Online Metric-Weighted Linear Representations for Robust Visual Tracking
In this paper, we propose a visual tracker based on a metric-weighted linear
representation of appearance. In order to capture the interdependence of
different feature dimensions, we develop two online distance metric learning
methods using proximity comparison information and structured output learning.
The learned metric is then incorporated into a linear representation of
appearance.
We show that online distance metric learning significantly improves the
robustness of the tracker, especially on those sequences exhibiting drastic
appearance changes. In order to bound growth in the number of training samples,
we design a time-weighted reservoir sampling method.
Moreover, we enable our tracker to automatically perform object
identification during the process of object tracking, by introducing a
collection of static template samples belonging to several object classes of
interest. Object identification results for an entire video sequence are
achieved by systematically combining the tracking information and visual
recognition at each frame. Experimental results on challenging video sequences
demonstrate the effectiveness of the method for both inter-frame tracking and
object identification.Comment: 51 pages. Appearing in IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and
Machine Intelligenc
Substructure and Boundary Modeling for Continuous Action Recognition
This paper introduces a probabilistic graphical model for continuous action
recognition with two novel components: substructure transition model and
discriminative boundary model. The first component encodes the sparse and
global temporal transition prior between action primitives in state-space model
to handle the large spatial-temporal variations within an action class. The
second component enforces the action duration constraint in a discriminative
way to locate the transition boundaries between actions more accurately. The
two components are integrated into a unified graphical structure to enable
effective training and inference. Our comprehensive experimental results on
both public and in-house datasets show that, with the capability to incorporate
additional information that had not been explicitly or efficiently modeled by
previous methods, our proposed algorithm achieved significantly improved
performance for continuous action recognition.Comment: Detailed version of the CVPR 2012 paper. 15 pages, 6 figure
Recurrent 3D Pose Sequence Machines
3D human articulated pose recovery from monocular image sequences is very
challenging due to the diverse appearances, viewpoints, occlusions, and also
the human 3D pose is inherently ambiguous from the monocular imagery. It is
thus critical to exploit rich spatial and temporal long-range dependencies
among body joints for accurate 3D pose sequence prediction. Existing approaches
usually manually design some elaborate prior terms and human body kinematic
constraints for capturing structures, which are often insufficient to exploit
all intrinsic structures and not scalable for all scenarios. In contrast, this
paper presents a Recurrent 3D Pose Sequence Machine(RPSM) to automatically
learn the image-dependent structural constraint and sequence-dependent temporal
context by using a multi-stage sequential refinement. At each stage, our RPSM
is composed of three modules to predict the 3D pose sequences based on the
previously learned 2D pose representations and 3D poses: (i) a 2D pose module
extracting the image-dependent pose representations, (ii) a 3D pose recurrent
module regressing 3D poses and (iii) a feature adaption module serving as a
bridge between module (i) and (ii) to enable the representation transformation
from 2D to 3D domain. These three modules are then assembled into a sequential
prediction framework to refine the predicted poses with multiple recurrent
stages. Extensive evaluations on the Human3.6M dataset and HumanEva-I dataset
show that our RPSM outperforms all state-of-the-art approaches for 3D pose
estimation.Comment: Published in CVPR 201
Flowing ConvNets for Human Pose Estimation in Videos
The objective of this work is human pose estimation in videos, where multiple
frames are available. We investigate a ConvNet architecture that is able to
benefit from temporal context by combining information across the multiple
frames using optical flow.
To this end we propose a network architecture with the following novelties:
(i) a deeper network than previously investigated for regressing heatmaps; (ii)
spatial fusion layers that learn an implicit spatial model; (iii) optical flow
is used to align heatmap predictions from neighbouring frames; and (iv) a final
parametric pooling layer which learns to combine the aligned heatmaps into a
pooled confidence map.
We show that this architecture outperforms a number of others, including one
that uses optical flow solely at the input layers, one that regresses joint
coordinates directly, and one that predicts heatmaps without spatial fusion.
The new architecture outperforms the state of the art by a large margin on
three video pose estimation datasets, including the very challenging Poses in
the Wild dataset, and outperforms other deep methods that don't use a graphical
model on the single-image FLIC benchmark (and also Chen & Yuille and Tompson et
al. in the high precision region).Comment: ICCV'1
Discriminatively Trained Latent Ordinal Model for Video Classification
We study the problem of video classification for facial analysis and human
action recognition. We propose a novel weakly supervised learning method that
models the video as a sequence of automatically mined, discriminative
sub-events (eg. onset and offset phase for "smile", running and jumping for
"highjump"). The proposed model is inspired by the recent works on Multiple
Instance Learning and latent SVM/HCRF -- it extends such frameworks to model
the ordinal aspect in the videos, approximately. We obtain consistent
improvements over relevant competitive baselines on four challenging and
publicly available video based facial analysis datasets for prediction of
expression, clinical pain and intent in dyadic conversations and on three
challenging human action datasets. We also validate the method with qualitative
results and show that they largely support the intuitions behind the method.Comment: Paper accepted in IEEE TPAMI. arXiv admin note: substantial text
overlap with arXiv:1604.0150
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