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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Human motion analysis: a review

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TLDR
The paper gives an overview of the various tasks involved in motion analysis of the human body, and focuses on three major areas related to interpreting human motion: motion analysis involving human body parts, tracking of human motion using single or multiple cameras, and recognizing human activities from image sequences.
Abstract
Human motion analysis is receiving increasing attention from computer vision researchers. This interest is motivated by a wide spectrum of applications, such as athletic performance analysis, surveillance, man-machine interfaces, content-based image storage and retrieval, and video conferencing. The paper gives an overview of the various tasks involved in motion analysis of the human body. The authors focus on three major areas related to interpreting human motion: 1) motion analysis involving human body parts, 2) tracking of human motion using single or multiple cameras, and 3) recognizing human activities from image sequences. Motion analysis of human body parts involves the low-level segmentation of the human body into segments connected by joints, and recovers the 3D structure of the human body using its 2D projections over a sequence of images. Tracking human motion using a single or multiple camera focuses on higher-level processing, in which moving humans are tracked without identifying specific parts of the body structure. After successfully matching the moving human image from one frame to another in image sequences, understanding the human movements or activities comes naturally, which leads to a discussion of recognizing human activities. The review is illustrated by examples.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A survey of advances in vision-based human motion capture and analysis

TL;DR: This survey reviews recent trends in video-based human capture and analysis, as well as discussing open problems for future research to achieve automatic visual analysis of human movement.
Journal ArticleDOI

A survey on vision-based human action recognition

TL;DR: A detailed overview of current advances in vision-based human action recognition is provided, including a discussion of limitations of the state of the art and outline promising directions of research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human activity analysis: A review

TL;DR: This article provides a detailed overview of various state-of-the-art research papers on human activity recognition, discussing both the methodologies developed for simple human actions and those for high-level activities.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey of Computer Vision-Based Human Motion Capture

TL;DR: A comprehensive survey of computer vision-based human motion capture literature from the past two decades is presented, with a general overview based on a taxonomy of system functionalities, broken down into four processes: initialization, tracking, pose estimation, and recognition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gesture Recognition: A Survey

TL;DR: A survey on gesture recognition with particular emphasis on hand gestures and facial expressions is provided, and applications involving hidden Markov models, particle filtering and condensation, finite-state machines, optical flow, skin color, and connectionist models are discussed in detail.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Determining Optical Flow

TL;DR: In this article, a method for finding the optical flow pattern is presented which assumes that the apparent velocity of the brightness pattern varies smoothly almost everywhere in the image, and an iterative implementation is shown which successfully computes the Optical Flow for a number of synthetic image sequences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pfinder: real-time tracking of the human body

TL;DR: Pfinder is a real-time system for tracking people and interpreting their behavior that uses a multiclass statistical model of color and shape to obtain a 2D representation of head and hands in a wide range of viewing conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Representation and recognition of the spatial organization of three-dimensional shapes.

TL;DR: The human visual process can be studied by examining the computational problems associated with deriving useful information from retinal images by applying the approach to the problem of representing three-dimensional shapes for the purpose of recognition.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Recognizing human action in time-sequential images using hidden Markov model

TL;DR: The recognition rate is improved by increasing the number of people used to generate the training data, indicating the possibility of establishing a person-independent action recognizer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual motion perception.

TL;DR: The author uses projective relations as the theoretical foundation of his investigations of visual space and motion and concludes that during locomotion the components of the human visual environment are interpreted as rigid structures in relative motion.
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