Abstract
For any visually-based interaction between persons and acting systems within a real-world environment the localization of a user by the system is a necessary condition. The presented work deals with this visual localization problem of a user concretely referred to the autonomous mobile robot system MILVA of our department. Since this system is applied under real-world conditions especially for the localization some proper techniques are needed which have an adequate robustness. In our opinion, this requires the combination of several components of saliency towards a multi-cue approach, consisting of structure- and color-based features [2].
This paper introduces one of them: the localization based on a typical shape of contour. A simple contour shape prototype model consists of an arrangement of oriented filters doing a piecewise approximation of the upper shape (head, shoulder) of a frontally aligned person. Applying such filter arrangement in a multiresolution manner, this leads to a robust localization of frontally aligned persons even in depth. The central problem of selecting the most promising (salient) image region is treated by means of a three-dimensional dynamic neural field performing a dynamic winner-take-all process (WTA, [1,6]).
After a successful localization of a person one can start a more detailed analysis of the gesture’s meaning: besides the recognition of static gestures we also concentrate on the acquisition and later the recognition of dynamic gestures.
TMR Marie Curie EU Fellowship # ERB FMBI CT 97 2613
Thuringian Ministry of Science, Research and Culture: GESTIK-Project
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Corradini, A., Braumann, UD., Brakensiek, A., Krabbes, M., Boehme, HJ., Gross, HM. (1999). Visual Person Localization with Dynamic Neural Fields: Towards a Gesture Recognition System. In: Marinaro, M., Tagliaferri, R. (eds) Neural Nets WIRN VIETRI-98. Perspectives in Neural Computing. Springer, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-0811-5_19
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-0811-5_19
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