Title :
Hand gesture symmetric behavior detection and analysis in natural conversation
Author :
Xiong, Yingen ; Quek, Francis ; McNeill, David
Author_Institution :
Vision Interfaces & Syst. Lab., Wright State Univ., Dayton, OH, USA
Abstract :
We present an experimental investigation into the phenomenon of gestural symmetry for two-handed gestures accompanying speech. We describe an approach to compute hand motion symmetries based on the correlation computations. Local symmetries are detected using a windowing operation. We demonstrate that the selection of a smaller window size results in better sensitivity to local symmetries at the expense of noise in the form of spurious symmetries and ´symmetry dropoffs´. Our algorithm applies a ´hole filling´ post process to address these detection problems. We examine the role of the detected motion symmetries of two-handed gestures in the structuring of speech. We compared discourse segments corresponding to extracted symmetries in two natural conversations against a discourse analysis by expert psycholinguistic coders. These comparisons illustrate the effectiveness of the symmetry feature for the understanding of underlying discourse structure. We believe that this basic characteristic of two-handed gestures accompanying speech must be incorporated in any multimodal interaction system involving two-handed gestures and speech.
Keywords :
feature extraction; gesture recognition; human factors; image sequences; interactive systems; motion estimation; correlation computations; detected motion symmetries; discourse analysis; discourse structure; expert psycholinguistic coders; gestural symmetry; hand gesture symmetric behavior detection; hand motion symmetries; hole filling post process; local symmetry detection; multimodal interaction system; natural conversation; natural conversations; speech structuring; symmetry dropoffs; two-handed gestures; windowing operation; Handicapped aids; Humans; Laboratories; Machine vision; Motion detection; Multimedia systems; Navigation; Psychology; Signal analysis; Speech analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Multimodal Interfaces, 2002. Proceedings. Fourth IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1834-6
DOI :
10.1109/ICMI.2002.1166989