Title :
Multiple Target Tracking Using Spatio-Temporal Markov Chain Monte Carlo Data Association
Author :
Yu, Qian ; Medioni, Gérard ; Cohen, Isaac
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles
Abstract :
We propose a framework for general multiple target tracking, where the input is a set of candidate regions in each frame, as obtained from a state of the art background learning, and the goal is to recover trajectories of targets over time from noisy observations. Due to occlusions by targets and static objects, noisy segmentation and false alarms, one foreground region may not correspond to one target faithfully. Therefore the one-to-one assumption used in most data association algorithm is not always satisfied. Our method overcomes the one-to-one assumption by formulating the visual tracking problem in terms of finding the best spatial and temporal association of observations, which maximizes the consistency of both motion and appearance of trajectories. To avoid enumerating all possible solutions, we take a data driven Markov chain Monte Carlo (DD-MCMC) approach to sample the solution space efficiently. The sampling is driven by an informed proposal scheme controlled by a joint probability model combining motion and appearance. To make sure the Markov chain to converge to a desired distribution, we propose an automatic approach to determine the parameters in the target distribution. Comparative experiments with quantitative evaluations are provided.
Keywords :
Markov processes; Monte Carlo methods; computer vision; image motion analysis; learning (artificial intelligence); surveillance; target tracking; video signal processing; background learning; false alarms; joint probability model; multiple target tracking; noisy segmentation; sampling; spatiotemporal Markov chain Monte Carlo data association; static objects; target distribution; target motion; target trajectory recovery; video surveillance system; visual tracking problem; Automatic control; Control systems; Intelligent robots; Intelligent systems; Monte Carlo methods; Motion detection; Object detection; Robotics and automation; Target tracking; Trajectory;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2007. CVPR '07. IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
Minneapolis, MN
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-1179-3
Electronic_ISBN :
1063-6919
DOI :
10.1109/CVPR.2007.382991