Title :
Role of shape and kinematics in human movement analysis
Author :
Veeraraghavan, Ashok ; Chowdhury, Amit Roy ; Chellappa, Rama
Author_Institution :
Dept. of ECE, Maryland Univ., College Park, MD, USA
fDate :
27 June-2 July 2004
Abstract :
Human gait and activity analysis from video is presently attracting a lot of attention in the computer vision community. In this paper we analyze the role of two of the most important cues in human motion-shape and kinematics. We present an experimental framework whereby it is possible to evaluate the relative importance of these two cues in computer vision based recognition algorithms. In the process, we propose a new gait recognition algorithm by computing the distance between two sequences of shapes that lie on a spherical manifold. In our experiments, shape is represented using Kendall´s definition of shape. Kinematics is represented using a Linear Dynamical system We place particular emphasis on human gait. Our conclusions show that shape plays a role which is more significant than kinematics in current automated gait based human identification algorithms. As a natural extension we study the role of shape and kinematics in activity recognition. Our experiments indicate that we require models that contain both shape and kinematics in order to perform accurate activity classification. These conclusions also allow us to explain the relative performance of many existing methods in computer-based human activity modeling.
Keywords :
autoregressive moving average processes; computer vision; feature extraction; gait analysis; hidden Markov models; image classification; image motion analysis; image sequences; autoregressive moving average processes; computer based human activity modeling; computer vision community; feature extraction; gait recognition algorithm; hidden Markov models; human activity analysis; human gait analysis; human identification algorithms; human motion analysis; human movement analysis; image classification; linear dynamical system; shape Kendall definition; spherical manifold; Active shape model; Algorithm design and analysis; Biological system modeling; Biometrics; Computer vision; Educational institutions; Humans; Kinematics; Motion analysis; Psychology;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2004. CVPR 2004. Proceedings of the 2004 IEEE Computer Society Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2158-4
DOI :
10.1109/CVPR.2004.1315104