66,507 research outputs found
Concurrence-Aware Long Short-Term Sub-Memories for Person-Person Action Recognition
Recently, Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) has become a popular choice to model
individual dynamics for single-person action recognition due to its ability of
modeling the temporal information in various ranges of dynamic contexts.
However, existing RNN models only focus on capturing the temporal dynamics of
the person-person interactions by naively combining the activity dynamics of
individuals or modeling them as a whole. This neglects the inter-related
dynamics of how person-person interactions change over time. To this end, we
propose a novel Concurrence-Aware Long Short-Term Sub-Memories (Co-LSTSM) to
model the long-term inter-related dynamics between two interacting people on
the bounding boxes covering people. Specifically, for each frame, two
sub-memory units store individual motion information, while a concurrent LSTM
unit selectively integrates and stores inter-related motion information between
interacting people from these two sub-memory units via a new co-memory cell.
Experimental results on the BIT and UT datasets show the superiority of
Co-LSTSM compared with the state-of-the-art methods
Future Person Localization in First-Person Videos
We present a new task that predicts future locations of people observed in
first-person videos. Consider a first-person video stream continuously recorded
by a wearable camera. Given a short clip of a person that is extracted from the
complete stream, we aim to predict that person's location in future frames. To
facilitate this future person localization ability, we make the following three
key observations: a) First-person videos typically involve significant
ego-motion which greatly affects the location of the target person in future
frames; b) Scales of the target person act as a salient cue to estimate a
perspective effect in first-person videos; c) First-person videos often capture
people up-close, making it easier to leverage target poses (e.g., where they
look) for predicting their future locations. We incorporate these three
observations into a prediction framework with a multi-stream
convolution-deconvolution architecture. Experimental results reveal our method
to be effective on our new dataset as well as on a public social interaction
dataset.Comment: Accepted to 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
A Causal And-Or Graph Model for Visibility Fluent Reasoning in Tracking Interacting Objects
Tracking humans that are interacting with the other subjects or environment
remains unsolved in visual tracking, because the visibility of the human of
interests in videos is unknown and might vary over time. In particular, it is
still difficult for state-of-the-art human trackers to recover complete human
trajectories in crowded scenes with frequent human interactions. In this work,
we consider the visibility status of a subject as a fluent variable, whose
change is mostly attributed to the subject's interaction with the surrounding,
e.g., crossing behind another object, entering a building, or getting into a
vehicle, etc. We introduce a Causal And-Or Graph (C-AOG) to represent the
causal-effect relations between an object's visibility fluent and its
activities, and develop a probabilistic graph model to jointly reason the
visibility fluent change (e.g., from visible to invisible) and track humans in
videos. We formulate this joint task as an iterative search of a feasible
causal graph structure that enables fast search algorithm, e.g., dynamic
programming method. We apply the proposed method on challenging video sequences
to evaluate its capabilities of estimating visibility fluent changes of
subjects and tracking subjects of interests over time. Results with comparisons
demonstrate that our method outperforms the alternative trackers and can
recover complete trajectories of humans in complicated scenarios with frequent
human interactions.Comment: accepted by CVPR 201
Social Attention: Modeling Attention in Human Crowds
Robots that navigate through human crowds need to be able to plan safe,
efficient, and human predictable trajectories. This is a particularly
challenging problem as it requires the robot to predict future human
trajectories within a crowd where everyone implicitly cooperates with each
other to avoid collisions. Previous approaches to human trajectory prediction
have modeled the interactions between humans as a function of proximity.
However, that is not necessarily true as some people in our immediate vicinity
moving in the same direction might not be as important as other people that are
further away, but that might collide with us in the future. In this work, we
propose Social Attention, a novel trajectory prediction model that captures the
relative importance of each person when navigating in the crowd, irrespective
of their proximity. We demonstrate the performance of our method against a
state-of-the-art approach on two publicly available crowd datasets and analyze
the trained attention model to gain a better understanding of which surrounding
agents humans attend to, when navigating in a crowd
Single-Shot Multi-Person 3D Pose Estimation From Monocular RGB
We propose a new single-shot method for multi-person 3D pose estimation in
general scenes from a monocular RGB camera. Our approach uses novel
occlusion-robust pose-maps (ORPM) which enable full body pose inference even
under strong partial occlusions by other people and objects in the scene. ORPM
outputs a fixed number of maps which encode the 3D joint locations of all
people in the scene. Body part associations allow us to infer 3D pose for an
arbitrary number of people without explicit bounding box prediction. To train
our approach we introduce MuCo-3DHP, the first large scale training data set
showing real images of sophisticated multi-person interactions and occlusions.
We synthesize a large corpus of multi-person images by compositing images of
individual people (with ground truth from mutli-view performance capture). We
evaluate our method on our new challenging 3D annotated multi-person test set
MuPoTs-3D where we achieve state-of-the-art performance. To further stimulate
research in multi-person 3D pose estimation, we will make our new datasets, and
associated code publicly available for research purposes.Comment: International Conference on 3D Vision (3DV), 201
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