Human Motion Tracking with a Kinematic Parameterization of Extremal Contours

International Journal of Computer Vision, Volume 79, Number 2, page 247-269 - September 2008
Download the publication : KnossowRonfardHoraud-IJCV08.pdf [1.9Mo]  
This paper addresses the problem of human motion tracking from multiple image sequences. The human body is described by five articulated mechanical chains and human body-parts are described by volumetric primiti ves with curved surfaces. If such a surface is observed with a camera, an extremal contour appears in the image whenever the surface turns smoothly away from the viewer. We describe a method that recovers human motion through a kinematic parameterization of these extremal contours. The method exploits the fact that the observed image motion of these contours is a function of both the rigid displacement of the surface and of the relative position and orientation between the viewer and the curved surface. First, we describe a parameterization of an extremal-contour point velocity for the case of developable surfaces. Second, we use the zero-reference kinematic representation and we derive an explicit formula that links extremal contour velocities to the angular velocities associated with the kinematic model. Third, we show how the chamfer-distance may be used to measure the discrepancy between predicted extremal contours and observed image contours; Moreover we show how the chamfer distance can be used as a differentiable multi-valued function and how the tracker based on this distance can be cast into a continuous non-linear optimization framework. Fourth, we describe implementation issues associated with a practical human-body tracker that may use an arbitrary number of cameras. One great methodological and practical advantage of our method is that it relies neither on model-to-image, nor on image-to-image point matches. In practice we model people with 5 kinematic chains, 19 volumetric primitives, and 54 degrees of freedom; We observe silhouettes in images gathered with several synchronized and calibrated cameras. The tracker has been successfully applied to several complex motions gathered at 30 frames/second.

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BibTex references

@Article\{KRH08,
  author       = "Knossow, David and Ronfard, Remi and Horaud, Radu P.",
  title        = "Human Motion Tracking with a Kinematic Parameterization of Extremal Contours",
  journal      = "International Journal of Computer Vision",
  number       = "2",
  volume       = "79",
  pages        = "247-269",
  month        = "September",
  year         = "2008",
  url          = "http://perception.inrialpes.fr/Publications/2008/KRH08"
}

Other publications in the database

» David Knossow
» Remi Ronfard
» Radu P. Horaud