End-effectors are considered to be the main topological extremities of a given 3D body. Even if the nature of such body is not restricted, this paper focuses on the human body case. Detection of human extremities is a key issue in the human motion capture domain, being needed to initialize and update the tracker. Therefore, the effectiveness of human motion capture systems usually depends on the reliability of the obtained end-effectors. The increasing accuracy, low cost and easy installation of depth cameras has opened the door to new strategies to overcome the body pose estimation problem. With the objective of detecting the head, hands and feet of a human body, we propose a new local feature computed from depth data, which giv...
International audienceObject recognition, human pose estimation and scene recognition are applicatio...
In this paper, we combine image segmentation techniques and face detection methods to extract the hu...
(Invited Paper- CVPR 2011 special issue) Abstract—We describe two new approaches to human pose estim...
End-effectors are considered to be the main topological extremities of a given 3D body. Even if the ...
End-effectors are usually related to the location of limbs, and their reliable detection enables rob...
End-effectors are usually related to the location of limbs, and their reliable detection enables rob...
This thesis presents a framework of a marker-less human pose recognition system by identifying key b...
This thesis contributes, in essence, four developments to the field of computer vision. The first tw...
Object recognition, human pose estimation and scene recognition are applications which are frequentl...
This paper addresses the problem of accurate and robust tracking of 3D human body pose from depth im...
This paper presents a novel method for estimating the human body in 3D using depth sensor data. The ...
Abstract. Human pose estimation has been actively studied for decades. While traditional approaches ...
In this work, we address the problem of human skeleton esti-mation when multiple depth cameras are a...
International audienceThis paper addresses the problem of the tracking of 3D human body pose from de...
In this paper, we integrate space carving and eigen detection methods to develop a bottom-up 3D huma...
International audienceObject recognition, human pose estimation and scene recognition are applicatio...
In this paper, we combine image segmentation techniques and face detection methods to extract the hu...
(Invited Paper- CVPR 2011 special issue) Abstract—We describe two new approaches to human pose estim...
End-effectors are considered to be the main topological extremities of a given 3D body. Even if the ...
End-effectors are usually related to the location of limbs, and their reliable detection enables rob...
End-effectors are usually related to the location of limbs, and their reliable detection enables rob...
This thesis presents a framework of a marker-less human pose recognition system by identifying key b...
This thesis contributes, in essence, four developments to the field of computer vision. The first tw...
Object recognition, human pose estimation and scene recognition are applications which are frequentl...
This paper addresses the problem of accurate and robust tracking of 3D human body pose from depth im...
This paper presents a novel method for estimating the human body in 3D using depth sensor data. The ...
Abstract. Human pose estimation has been actively studied for decades. While traditional approaches ...
In this work, we address the problem of human skeleton esti-mation when multiple depth cameras are a...
International audienceThis paper addresses the problem of the tracking of 3D human body pose from de...
In this paper, we integrate space carving and eigen detection methods to develop a bottom-up 3D huma...
International audienceObject recognition, human pose estimation and scene recognition are applicatio...
In this paper, we combine image segmentation techniques and face detection methods to extract the hu...
(Invited Paper- CVPR 2011 special issue) Abstract—We describe two new approaches to human pose estim...