Přehled o publikaci
2017
Human Gait Recognition from Motion Capture Data in Signature Poses
BALÁŽIA, Michal a Konstantinos N. PLATANIOTISZákladní údaje
Originální název
Human Gait Recognition from Motion Capture Data in Signature Poses
Autoři
BALÁŽIA, Michal (703 Slovensko, garant, domácí) a Konstantinos N. PLATANIOTIS (124 Kanada)
Vydání
IET Biometrics, London, UK, IET, 2017, 2047-4938
Další údaje
Jazyk
angličtina
Typ výsledku
Článek v odborném periodiku
Obor
Informatika
Stát vydavatele
Velká Británie a Severní Irsko
Utajení
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Kód RIV
RIV/00216224:14330/17:00095906
Organizace
Fakulta informatiky – Masarykova univerzita – Repozitář
UT WoS
000396411600010
Klíčová slova česky
rozpoznavani podle chuze
Klíčová slova anglicky
gait recognition
Návaznosti
MUNI/A/0915/2013, interní kód Repo. MUNI/A/1213/2014, interní kód Repo.
Změněno: 3. 9. 2020 11:02, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík
Anotace
V originále
Most contribution to the field of structure-based human gait recognition has been done through design of extraordinary gait features. Many research groups that address this topic introduce a unique combination of gait features, select a couple of well-known object classiers, and test some variations of their methods on their custom Kinect databases. For a practical system, it is not necessary to invent an ideal gait feature -- there have been many good geometric features designed -- but to smartly process the data there are at our disposal. This work proposes a gait recognition method without design of novel gait features; instead, we suggest an effective and highly efficient way of processing known types of features. Our method extracts a couple of joint angles from two signature poses within a gait cycle to form a gait pattern descriptor, and classifies the query subject by the baseline 1-NN classier. Not only are these poses distinctive enough, they also rarely accommodate motion irregularities that would result in confusion of identities. We experimentally demonstrate that our gait recognition method outperforms other relevant methods in terms of recognition rate and computational complexity. Evaluations were performed on an experimental database that precisely simulates street-level video surveillance environment.