In order to study human motion in biomechanical applications, a critical component is to accurately obtain the 3D joint positions of the user's body. Computer vision and inverse kinematics are used to achieve this objective without markers or special devices attached to the body. The problem of these systems is that the inverse kinematics is blinded with respect to the projection of body segments into the images used by the computer vision algorithms. In this paper, we present how to add image constraints to inverse kinematics in order to estimate human motion. Specifically, we explain how to define a criterion to use images in order to guide the posture reconstruction of the articulated chain. Tests with synthetic images show how the scheme performs well in an ideal situation. In order to test its potential in real situations, more experiments with task specific image sequences are also presented. By means of a quantitative study of different sequences, the results obtained show how this approach improves the performance of inverse kinematics in this application. Copyright © 2010 Antoni Jaume-i-Capo et al.
CITATION STYLE
Jaume-I-Cap, A., Varona, J., González-Hidalgo, M., & Perales, F. J. (2010). Adding image constraints to inverse kinematics for human motion capture. Eurasip Journal on Advances in Signal Processing, 2010. https://doi.org/10.1155/2010/142354
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