DocumentCode :
1639503
Title :
Shape-from-silhouette of articulated objects and its use for human body kinematics estimation and motion capture
Author :
Cheung, German K M ; Baker, Simon ; Kanade, Takeo
Author_Institution :
Robotics Inst., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Volume :
1
fYear :
2003
Abstract :
Shape-from-silhouette (SFS), also known as visual hull (VH) construction, is a popular 3D reconstruction method, which estimates the shape of an object from multiple silhouette images. The original SFS formulation assumes that the entire silhouette images are captured either at the same time or while the object is static. This assumption is violated when the object moves or changes shape. Hence the use of SFS with moving objects has been restricted to treating each time instant sequentially and independently. Recently we have successfully extended the traditional SFS formulation to refine the shape of a rigidly moving object over time. We further extend SFS to apply to dynamic articulated objects. Given silhouettes of a moving articulated object, the process of recovering the shape and motion requires two steps: (1) correctly segmenting (points on the boundary of) the silhouettes to each articulated part of the object, (2) estimating the motion of each individual part using the segmented silhouette. In this paper, we propose an iterative algorithm to solve this simultaneous assignment and alignment problem. Once we have estimated the shape and motion of each part of the object, the articulation points between each pair of rigid parts are obtained by solving a simple motion constraint between the connected parts. To validate our algorithm, we first apply it to segment the different body parts and estimate the joint positions of a person. The acquired kinematic (shape and joint) information is then used to track the motion of the person in new video sequences.
Keywords :
edge detection; image reconstruction; image segmentation; image sequences; iterative methods; kinematics; motion estimation; object detection; optical tracking; stereo image processing; video signal processing; 3D reconstruction; dynamic articulated object; human body kinematics estimation; iterative algorithm; joint position estimation; motion capture; motion estimation; motion recovery; motion tracking; moving articulated object; multiple silhouette images; object shape estimation; shape recovery; shape-from-silhouette; silhouette image segmentation; video sequence; visual hull construction; Humans; Image segmentation; Iterative algorithms; Kinematics; Motion estimation; Reconstruction algorithms; Robots; Shape; Surface treatment; Tracking;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2003. Proceedings. 2003 IEEE Computer Society Conference on
ISSN :
1063-6919
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1900-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CVPR.2003.1211340
Filename :
1211340
Link To Document :
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