137,343 research outputs found

    Three-dimensional Tracking of a Large Number of High Dynamic Objects from Multiple Views using Current Statistical Model

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    Three-dimensional tracking of multiple objects from multiple views has a wide range of applications, especially in the study of bio-cluster behavior which requires precise trajectories of research objects. However, there are significant temporal-spatial association uncertainties when the objects are similar to each other, frequently maneuver, and cluster in large numbers. Aiming at such a multi-view multi-object 3D tracking scenario, a current statistical model based Kalman particle filter (CSKPF) method is proposed following the Bayesian tracking-while-reconstruction framework. The CSKPF algorithm predicts the objects' states and estimates the objects' state covariance by the current statistical model to importance particle sampling efficiency, and suppresses the measurement noise by the Kalman filter. The simulation experiments prove that the CSKPF method can improve the tracking integrity, continuity, and precision compared with the existing constant velocity based particle filter (CVPF) method. The real experiment on fruitfly clusters also confirms the effectiveness of the CSKPF method.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure

    Occlusion reasoning for multiple object visual tracking

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    Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityOcclusion reasoning for visual object tracking in uncontrolled environments is a challenging problem. It becomes significantly more difficult when dense groups of indistinguishable objects are present in the scene that cause frequent inter-object interactions and occlusions. We present several practical solutions that tackle the inter-object occlusions for video surveillance applications. In particular, this thesis proposes three methods. First, we propose "reconstruction-tracking," an online multi-camera spatial-temporal data association method for tracking large groups of objects imaged with low resolution. As a variant of the well-known Multiple-Hypothesis-Tracker, our approach localizes the positions of objects in 3D space with possibly occluded observations from multiple camera views and performs temporal data association in 3D. Second, we develop "track linking," a class of offline batch processing algorithms for long-term occlusions, where the decision has to be made based on the observations from the entire tracking sequence. We construct a graph representation to characterize occlusion events and propose an efficient graph-based/combinatorial algorithm to resolve occlusions. Third, we propose a novel Bayesian framework where detection and data association are combined into a single module and solved jointly. Almost all traditional tracking systems address the detection and data association tasks separately in sequential order. Such a design implies that the output of the detector has to be reliable in order to make the data association work. Our framework takes advantage of the often complementary nature of the two subproblems, which not only avoids the error propagation issue from which traditional "detection-tracking approaches" suffer but also eschews common heuristics such as "nonmaximum suppression" of hypotheses by modeling the likelihood of the entire image. The thesis describes a substantial number of experiments, involving challenging, notably distinct simulated and real data, including infrared and visible-light data sets recorded ourselves or taken from data sets publicly available. In these videos, the number of objects ranges from a dozen to a hundred per frame in both monocular and multiple views. The experiments demonstrate that our approaches achieve results comparable to those of state-of-the-art approaches

    Learning motion patterns using hierarchical Bayesian models

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2009.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 163-179).In far-field visual surveillance, one of the key tasks is to monitor activities in the scene. Through learning motion patterns of objects, computers can help people understand typical activities, detect abnormal activities, and learn the models of semantically meaningful scene structures, such as paths commonly taken by objects. In medical imaging, some issues similar to learning motion patterns arise. Diffusion Tensor Magnetic Resonance Imaging (DT-MRI) is one of the first methods to visualize and quantify the organization of white matter in the brain in vivo. Using methods of tractography segmentation, one can connect local diffusion measurements to create global fiber trajectories, which can then be clustered into anatomically meaningful bundles. This is similar to clustering trajectories of objects in visual surveillance. In this thesis, we develop several unsupervised frameworks to learn motion patterns from complicated and large scale data sets using hierarchical Bayesian models. We explore their applications to activity analysis in far-field visual surveillance and tractography segmentation in medical imaging. Many existing activity analysis approaches in visual surveillance are ad hoc, relying on predefined rules or simple probabilistic models, which prohibits them from modeling complicated activities. Our hierarchical Bayesian models can structure dependency among a large number of variables to model complicated activities. Various constraints and knowledge can be nicely added into a Bayesian framework as priors. When the number of clusters is not well defined in advance, our nonparametric Bayesian models can learn it driven by data with Dirichlet Processes priors.(cont.) In this work, several hierarchical Bayesian models are proposed considering different types of scenes and different settings of cameras. If the scenes are crowded, it is difficult to track objects because of frequent occlusions and difficult to separate different types of co-occurring activities. We jointly model simple activities and complicated global behaviors at different hierarchical levels directly from moving pixels without tracking objects. If the scene is sparse and there is only a single camera view, we first track objects and then cluster trajectories into different activity categories. In the meanwhile, we learn the models of paths commonly taken by objects. Under the Bayesian framework, using the models of activities learned from historical data as priors, the models of activities can be dynamically updated over time. When multiple camera views are used to monitor a large area, by adding a smoothness constraint as a prior, our hierarchical Bayesian model clusters trajectories in multiple camera views without tracking objects across camera views. The topology of multiple camera views is assumed to be unknown and arbitrary. In tractography segmentation, our approach can cluster much larger scale data sets than existing approaches and automatically learn the number of bundles from data. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approaches on multiple visual surveillance and medical imaging data sets.by Xiaogang Wang.Ph.D

    Recognition of 3-D Objects from Multiple 2-D Views by a Self-Organizing Neural Architecture

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    The recognition of 3-D objects from sequences of their 2-D views is modeled by a neural architecture, called VIEWNET that uses View Information Encoded With NETworks. VIEWNET illustrates how several types of noise and varialbility in image data can be progressively removed while incornplcte image features are restored and invariant features are discovered using an appropriately designed cascade of processing stages. VIEWNET first processes 2-D views of 3-D objects using the CORT-X 2 filter, which discounts the illuminant, regularizes and completes figural boundaries, and removes noise from the images. Boundary regularization and cornpletion are achieved by the same mechanisms that suppress image noise. A log-polar transform is taken with respect to the centroid of the resulting figure and then re-centered to achieve 2-D scale and rotation invariance. The invariant images are coarse coded to further reduce noise, reduce foreshortening effects, and increase generalization. These compressed codes are input into a supervised learning system based on the fuzzy ARTMAP algorithm. Recognition categories of 2-D views are learned before evidence from sequences of 2-D view categories is accumulated to improve object recognition. Recognition is studied with noisy and clean images using slow and fast learning. VIEWNET is demonstrated on an MIT Lincoln Laboratory database of 2-D views of jet aircraft with and without additive noise. A recognition rate of 90% is achieved with one 2-D view category and of 98.5% correct with three 2-D view categories.National Science Foundation (IRI 90-24877); Office of Naval Research (N00014-91-J-1309, N00014-91-J-4100, N00014-92-J-0499); Air Force Office of Scientific Research (F9620-92-J-0499, 90-0083

    Evaluation of optimisation techniques for multiscopic rendering

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    A thesis submitted to the University of Bedfordshire in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science by ResearchThis project evaluates different performance optimisation techniques applied to stereoscopic and multiscopic rendering for interactive applications. The artefact features a robust plug-in package for the Unity game engine. The thesis provides background information for the performance optimisations, outlines all the findings, evaluates the optimisations and provides suggestions for future work. Scrum development methodology is used to develop the artefact and quantitative research methodology is used to evaluate the findings by measuring performance. This project concludes that the use of each performance optimisation has specific use case scenarios in which performance benefits. Foveated rendering provides greatest performance increase for both stereoscopic and multiscopic rendering but is also more computationally intensive as it requires an eye tracking solution. Dynamic resolution is very beneficial when overall frame rate smoothness is needed and frame drops are present. Depth optimisation is beneficial for vast open environments but can lead to decreased performance if used inappropriately

    Predicting Out-of-View Feature Points for Model-Based Camera Pose Estimation

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    In this work we present a novel framework that uses deep learning to predict object feature points that are out-of-view in the input image. This system was developed with the application of model-based tracking in mind, particularly in the case of autonomous inspection robots, where only partial views of the object are available. Out-of-view prediction is enabled by applying scaling to the feature point labels during network training. This is combined with a recurrent neural network architecture designed to provide the final prediction layers with rich feature information from across the spatial extent of the input image. To show the versatility of these out-of-view predictions, we describe how to integrate them in both a particle filter tracker and an optimisation based tracker. To evaluate our work we compared our framework with one that predicts only points inside the image. We show that as the amount of the object in view decreases, being able to predict outside the image bounds adds robustness to the final pose estimation.Comment: Submitted to IROS 201
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