Flycon

Real-time environment-independent multi-view human pose estimation with aerial vehicles

Journal Article (2018)
Author(s)

Tobias Nägeli (ETH Zürich)

Samuel Oberholzer (ETH Zürich)

Silvan Pluss (ETH Zürich)

Javier Alonso-Mora (TU Delft - Learning & Autonomous Control)

Otmar Hilliges (ETH Zürich)

Research Group
Learning & Autonomous Control
Copyright
© 2018 Tobias Nageli, Samuel Oberholzer, Silvan Pluss, J. Alonso-Mora, Otmar Hilliges
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1145/3272127.3275022
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 Tobias Nageli, Samuel Oberholzer, Silvan Pluss, J. Alonso-Mora, Otmar Hilliges
Research Group
Learning & Autonomous Control
Issue number
6
Volume number
37
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

We propose a real-time method for the infrastructure-free estimation of articulated human motion. The approach leverages a swarm of camer aequipped flying robots and jointly optimizes the swarm's and skeletal states, which include the 3D joint positions and a set of bones. Our method allows to track the motion of human subjects, for example an athlete, over long time horizons and long distances, in challenging settings and at large scale, where fixed infrastructure approaches are not applicable. The proposed algorithm uses active infra-red markers, runs in real-time and accurately estimates robot and human pose parameters online without the need for accurately calibrated or stationary mounted cameras. Our method i) estimates a global coordinate frame for the MAV swarm, ii) jointly optimizes the human pose and relative camera positions, and iii) estimates the length of the human bones. The entire swarm is then controlled via a model predictive controller to maximize visibility of the subject from multiple viewpoints even under fast motion such as jumping or jogging. We demonstrate our method in a number of difficult scenarios including capture of long locomotion sequences at the scale of a triplex gym, in non-planar terrain, while climbing and in outdoor scenarios. CCS Concepts: • Computing methodologies → Motion capture; Reconstruction; Robotic planning; Motion path planning;.

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