7 research outputs found
Skeleton Driven Non-rigid Motion Tracking and 3D Reconstruction
This paper presents a method which can track and 3D reconstruct the non-rigid
surface motion of human performance using a moving RGB-D camera. 3D
reconstruction of marker-less human performance is a challenging problem due to
the large range of articulated motions and considerable non-rigid deformations.
Current approaches use local optimization for tracking. These methods need many
iterations to converge and may get stuck in local minima during sudden
articulated movements. We propose a puppet model-based tracking approach using
skeleton prior, which provides a better initialization for tracking articulated
movements. The proposed approach uses an aligned puppet model to estimate
correct correspondences for human performance capture. We also contribute a
synthetic dataset which provides ground truth locations for frame-by-frame
geometry and skeleton joints of human subjects. Experimental results show that
our approach is more robust when faced with sudden articulated motions, and
provides better 3D reconstruction compared to the existing state-of-the-art
approaches.Comment: Accepted in DICTA 201
Non-rigid Reconstruction with a Single Moving RGB-D Camera
We present a novel non-rigid reconstruction method using a moving RGB-D
camera. Current approaches use only non-rigid part of the scene and completely
ignore the rigid background. Non-rigid parts often lack sufficient geometric
and photometric information for tracking large frame-to-frame motion. Our
approach uses camera pose estimated from the rigid background for foreground
tracking. This enables robust foreground tracking in situations where large
frame-to-frame motion occurs. Moreover, we are proposing a multi-scale
deformation graph which improves non-rigid tracking without compromising the
quality of the reconstruction. We are also contributing a synthetic dataset
which is made publically available for evaluating non-rigid reconstruction
methods. The dataset provides frame-by-frame ground truth geometry of the
scene, the camera trajectory, and masks for background foreground. Experimental
results show that our approach is more robust in handling larger frame-to-frame
motions and provides better reconstruction compared to state-of-the-art
approaches.Comment: Accepted in International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR
2018
Non-rigid 3D reconstruction of the human body in motion
This thesis addresses the challenging problem of three-dimensional (3-D) reconstruction of a fast-moving human, using a single moving camera which captures both depth and colour information (RGB-D). Our objective is to find solutions to the challenges arising from the high camera motion and articulated human motions. We have developed an effective system which uses the camera pose, skeleton detection, and multi-scale information, to produce a robust reconstruction framework for 3-D modelling of fast-moving humans. The outcome of the research is useful for several applications of human performance capture systems in sports, the arts, and animation industries
Non-rigid Reconstruction with a Single Moving RGB-D Camera
We present a novel non-rigid reconstruction method using a moving RGB-D camera. Current approaches use only non-rigid part of the scene and completely ignore the rigid background. Non-rigid parts often lack sufficient geometric and photometric information for tracking large frame-to-frame motion. Our approach uses camera pose estimated from the rigid background for foreground tracking. This enables robust foreground tracking in situations where large frame-to-frame motion occurs. Moreover, we are proposing a multi-scale deformation graph which improves non-rigid tracking without compromising the quality of the reconstruction. We are also contributing a synthetic dataset which is made publically available for evaluating non-rigid reconstruction methods. The dataset provides frame-by-frame ground truth geometry of the scene, the camera trajectory, and masks for background foreground. Experimental results show that our approach is more robust in handling larger frame-to-frame motions and provides better reconstruction compared to state-of-the-art approaches
Skeleton driven non-rigid motion tracking and 3D reconstruction
This paper presents a method which can track and 3D reconstruct the non-rigid surface motion of human performance using a moving RGB-D camera. 3D reconstruction of marker-less human performance is a challenging problem due to the large range of articulated motions and considerable non-rigid deformations. Current approaches use local optimization for tracking. These methods need many iterations to converge and may get stuck in local minima during sudden articulated movements. We propose a puppet model-based tracking approach using skeleton prior, which provides a better initialization for tracking articulated movements. The proposed approach uses an aligned puppet model to estimate correct correspondences for human performance capture. We also contribute a synthetic dataset which provides ground truth locations for frame-by-frame geometry and skeleton joints of human subjects. Experimental results show that our approach is more robust when faced with sudden articulated motions, and provides better 3D reconstruction compared to the existing state-of-the-art approaches