Title :
Tracking appearances with occlusions
Author :
Wu, Ying ; Yu, Ting ; Hua, Gang
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Northwestern Univ., Evanston, IL, USA
Abstract :
Occlusion is a difficult problem for appearance-based target tracking, especially when we need to track multiple targets simultaneously and maintain the target identities during tracking. To cope with the occlusion problem explicitly, this paper proposes a dynamic Bayesian network, which accommodates an extra hidden process for occlusion and stipulates the conditions on which the image observation likelihood is calculated. The statistical inference of such a hidden process can reveal the occlusion relations among different targets, which makes the tracker more robust against partial even complete occlusions. In addition, considering the fact that target appearances change with views, another generative model for multiple view representation is proposed by adding a switching variable to select from different view templates. The integration of the occlusion model and multiple view model results in a complex dynamic Bayesian network, where extra hidden processes describe the switch of targets´ templates, the targets´ dynamics, and the occlusions among different targets. The tracking and inferring algorithms are implemented by the sampling-based sequential Monte Carlo strategies. Our experiments show the effectiveness of the proposed probabilistic models and the algorithms.
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; belief networks; hidden feature removal; image sampling; image sequences; object detection; statistical analysis; target tracking; appearance-based target tracking; dynamic Bayesian network; generative model; image observation likelihood calculation; inference algorithm; multiple view representation; occlusion relation; probabilistic model; sampling-based sequential Monte Carlo strategy; statistical inference; switching variable; target appearance; target dynamics; target identity; target template; view template selection; Application software; Bayesian methods; Hidden Markov models; Human computer interaction; Inference algorithms; Maintenance engineering; Monte Carlo methods; Robustness; Switches; Target tracking;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2003. Proceedings. 2003 IEEE Computer Society Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1900-8
DOI :
10.1109/CVPR.2003.1211433