49 research outputs found

    MPEG-4 content creation: integration of MPEG-4 content creation tools into an existing animation tool

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    This thesis provides a complete framework that enables the creation of photorealistic 3D human models in real-world environments. The approach allows a non-expert user to use any digital capture device to obtain four images of an individual and create a personalised 3D model, for multimedia applications. To achieve this, it is necessary that the system is automatic and that the reconstruction process is flexible to account for information that is not available or incorrectly captured. In this approach the individual is automatically extracted from the environment using constrained active B-spline templates that are scaled and automatically initialised using only image information. These templates incorporate the energy minimising framework for Active Contour Models, providing a suitable and flexible method to deal with the adjustments in pose an individual can adopt. The final states o f the templates describe the individual’s shape. The contours in each view are combined to form a 3D B-spline surface that characterises an individual’s maximal silhouette equivalent. The surface provides a mould that contains sufficient information to allow for the active deformation of an underlying generic human model. This modelling approach is performed using a novel technique that evolves active-meshes to 3D for deforming the underlying human model, while adaptively constraining it to preserve its existing structure. The active-mesh approach incorporates internal constraints that maintain the structural relationship of the vertices of the human model, while external forces deform the model congruous to the 3D surface mould. The strength of the internal constraints can be reduced to allow the model to adopt the exact shape o f the bounding volume or strengthened to preserve the internal structure, particularly in areas of high detail. This novel implementation provides a uniform framework that can be simply and automatically applied to the entire human model

    Articulated human tracking and behavioural analysis in video sequences

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    Recently, there has been a dramatic growth of interest in the observation and tracking of human subjects through video sequences. Arguably, the principal impetus has come from the perceived demand for technological surveillance, however applications in entertainment, intelligent domiciles and medicine are also increasing. This thesis examines human articulated tracking and the classi cation of human movement, rst separately and then as a sequential process. First, this thesis considers the development and training of a 3D model of human body structure and dynamics. To process video sequences, an observation model is also designed with a multi-component likelihood based on edge, silhouette and colour. This is de ned on the articulated limbs, and visible from a single or multiple cameras, each of which may be calibrated from that sequence. Second, for behavioural analysis, we develop a methodology in which actions and activities are described by semantic labels generated from a Movement Cluster Model (MCM). Third, a Hierarchical Partitioned Particle Filter (HPPF) was developed for human tracking that allows multi-level parameter search consistent with the body structure. This tracker relies on the articulated motion prediction provided by the MCM at pose or limb level. Fourth, tracking and movement analysis are integrated to generate a probabilistic activity description with action labels. The implemented algorithms for tracking and behavioural analysis are tested extensively and independently against ground truth on human tracking and surveillance datasets. Dynamic models are shown to predict and generate synthetic motion, while MCM recovers both periodic and non-periodic activities, de ned either on the whole body or at the limb level. Tracking results are comparable with the state of the art, however the integrated behaviour analysis adds to the value of the approach.Overseas Research Students Awards Scheme (ORSAS

    Modelling human pose and shape based on a database of human 3D scans

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    Generating realistic human shapes and motion is an important task both in the motion picture industry and in computer games. In feature films, high quality and believability are the most important characteristics. Additionally, when creating virtual doubles the generated charactes have to match as closely as possible to given real persons. In contrast, in computer games the level of realism does not need to be as high but real-time performance is essential. It is desirable to meet all these requirements with a general model of human pose and shape. In addition, many markerless human tracking methods applied, e.g., in biomedicine or sports science can benefit greatly from the availability of such a model because most methods require a 3D model of the tracked subject as input, which can be generated on-the-fly given a suitable shape and pose model. In this thesis, a comprehensive procedure is presented to generate different general models of human pose. A database of 3D scans spanning the space of human pose and shape variations is introduced. Then, four different approaches for transforming the database into a general model of human pose and shape are presented, which improve the current state of the art. Experiments are performed to evaluate and compare the proposed models on real-world problems, i.e., characters are generated given semantic constraints and the underlying shape and pose of humans given 3D scans, multi-view video, or uncalibrated monocular images is estimated.Die Erzeugung realistischer Menschenmodelle ist eine wichtige Anwendung in der Filmindustrie und bei Computerspielen. In Spielen ist Echtzeitsynthese unabdingbar aber der Detailgrad muß nicht so hoch sein wie in Filmen. Für virtuelle Doubles, wie sie z.B. in Filmen eingesetzt werden, muss der generierte Charakter dem gegebenen realen Menschen möglichst ähnlich sein. Mit einem generellen Modell für menschliche Pose und Körperform ist es möglich alle diese Anforderungen zu erfüllen. Zusätzlich können viele Verfahren zur markerlosen Bewegungserfassung, wie sie z.B. in der Biomedizin oder in den Sportwissenschaften eingesetzt werden, von einem generellen Modell für Pose und Körperform profitieren. Da diese ein 3D Modell der erfassten Person benötigen, das jetzt zur Laufzeit generiert werden kann. In dieser Doktorarbeit wird ein umfassender Ansatz vorgestellt, um verschiedene Modelle für Pose und Körperform zu berechnen. Zunächst wird eine Datenbank von 3D Scans aufgebaut, die Pose- und Körperformvariationen von Menschen umfasst. Dann werden vier verschiedene Verfahren eingeführt, die daraus generelle Modelle für Pose und Körperform berechnen und Probleme beim Stand der Technik beheben. Die vorgestellten Modelle werden auf realistischen Problemstellungen getestet. So werden Menschenmodelle aus einigen wenigen Randbedingungen erzeugt und Pose und Körperform von Probanden wird aus 3D Scans, Multi-Kamera Videodaten und Einzelbildern der bekleideten Personen geschätzt
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