Publication | Closed Access
Tracking through singularities and discontinuities by random sampling
80
Citations
13
References
1999
Year
Unknown Venue
Sampling (Signal Processing)Engineering3D Pose EstimationField RoboticsKalman FilteringKinesiologyHuman Body MotionMotion CaptureObject TrackingStochastic GeometryKinematicsHuman MotionHealth SciencesMachine VisionSampling TheoryMoving Object TrackingComputer VisionMarkerless TrackingEye TrackingHuman MovementRoboticsTracking System
Some issues in markerless tracking of human body motion are addressed. Extended Kalman filters have commonly been applied to kinematic variables, to combine predictions consistent with plausible motion, with the incoming stream of visual measurements. Kalman filtering is applicable only when the underlying distribution is approximately Gaussian. Often this assumption proves remarkably robust. There are two pervasive circumstances under which the Gaussianity assumption can break down. The first is kinematic singularity and the second is at joint endstops. Failure of Kalman filtering under these circumstances is illustrated. The non-Gaussian nature of the distributions is demonstrated experimentally by means of Monte Carlo simulation. Random simulation (particle filtering or Condensation) proves to provide a robust alternative algorithm for tracking that can also deal with these difficult conditions.
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