Title :
Possibility theory based continuous Indian Sign Language gesture recognition
Author :
Neha Baranwal;Kumud Tripathi;G.C. Nandi
Author_Institution :
Robotics and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Indian Institute of Information Technology, Allahabad, India
Abstract :
Today sign language is a vibrant field of research because it helps us to establish communication between hearing impaired community and normal community. In this paper, we proposed a novel continuous Indian Sign Language (ISL) gesture recognition technique where possibility theory (PT) has been applied. Preprocessing and extraction of overlapping frames (start and end point of each gesture) are the major issues which is being covered in this paper using background modeling and noble gradient method. Overlapping frames are helpful for fragmenting a continuous ISL gesture into isolated gestures. These isolated gestures are further processed and classified. During the segmentation process some of the gesture structures like shape and orientation of hand are deformed. A novel concept of wavelet descriptor has been applied here for extracting correct features of these deformed features and combine with the other two features (orientation and speed). Wavelet descriptor is very generic for finding a moment invariant features from the shape of the hand due to its multiresolution property. 3 dimensional feature vectors (orientation, speed and moment) are parellely combined and classified using possibility theory. Possibility theory is really suited for handling uncertainty as well as the precision present between intermediate frames. Experiments are performed on 10 sentences of continuous ISL having 1000 samples. This data set has been created in Robotics and AI laboratory, Indian Institute of Information Technology, Allahabad, India, where 4 persons are used for training and 6 persons are used for testing. From analysis of results we found that our proposed approach gives 92% classification results on continuous ISL. A classified isolated ISL gestures are combined for generating a judgment of conviction in the form of text or words.
Keywords :
"Robots","Random access memory","Ferroelectric films","Nonvolatile memory","Face","Markov processes","Computational modeling"
Conference_Titel :
TENCON 2015 - 2015 IEEE Region 10 Conference
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-8639-2
Electronic_ISBN :
2159-3450
DOI :
10.1109/TENCON.2015.7372806