4.7 Article

Articulated Object Tracking by High-Speed Monocular RGB Camera

Journal

IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL
Volume 21, Issue 10, Pages 11899-11915

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSEN.2020.3032059

Keywords

Cameras; Target tracking; Object tracking; Two dimensional displays; Image processing; Three-dimensional displays; Sensors; High-speed vision; articulated object tracking; region-based tracking; monocular camera

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [19H02102]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19H02102] Funding Source: KAKEN

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This study introduces a novel method for high-frame-rate articulated object tracking using monocular cameras. By integrating dual-quaternion kinematics with fast pixel-wise-posteriors tracking framework, the method is capable of robustly tracking articulated objects with many degrees of freedom in dynamic environments.
In recent years, tracking of articulated objects at high speed with monocular cameras has been gaining attention. This study presents a novel method for high-frame-rate articulated object tracking with a monocular camera. The method is an extended version of our previous research on high-speed monocular rigid object tracking. In this study, to realize tracking of an articulated object, we integrate dual-quaternion kinematics with our previous fast pixel-wise-posteriors (fast-PWP3D) tracking framework, and propose an auto-regressive (AR) process to encode the dynamic propagation of the estimated state vectors. We give a full three-dimensional derivation of the mathematical formulation of our method and show that our method is capable of tracking an articulated object having a large number of degrees of freedom with only a monocular camera, and is robust against dynamic environmental changes (e.g., illumination/partial occlusion). Moreover, we show an efficient implementation strategy of our method. The results of real-time experiments show that we achieved nearly 350 Hz performance when tracking a four degrees-of-freedom (4-DOF) articulated object with a monocular camera.

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