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Biview Learning for Human Posture Segmentation from 3D Points Cloud

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Listed:
  • Maoying Qiao
  • Jun Cheng
  • Wei Bian
  • Dacheng Tao

Abstract

Posture segmentation plays an essential role in human motion analysis. The state-of-the-art method extracts sufficiently high-dimensional features from 3D depth images for each 3D point and learns an efficient body part classifier. However, high-dimensional features are memory-consuming and difficult to handle on large-scale training dataset. In this paper, we propose an efficient two-stage dimension reduction scheme, termed biview learning, to encode two independent views which are depth-difference features (DDF) and relative position features (RPF). Biview learning explores the complementary property of DDF and RPF, and uses two stages to learn a compact yet comprehensive low-dimensional feature space for posture segmentation. In the first stage, discriminative locality alignment (DLA) is applied to the high-dimensional DDF to learn a discriminative low-dimensional representation. In the second stage, canonical correlation analysis (CCA) is used to explore the complementary property of RPF and the dimensionality reduced DDF. Finally, we train a support vector machine (SVM) over the output of CCA. We carefully validate the effectiveness of DLA and CCA utilized in the two-stage scheme on our 3D human points cloud dataset. Experimental results show that the proposed biview learning scheme significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art method for human posture segmentation.

Suggested Citation

  • Maoying Qiao & Jun Cheng & Wei Bian & Dacheng Tao, 2014. "Biview Learning for Human Posture Segmentation from 3D Points Cloud," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 9(1), pages 1-9, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0085811
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0085811
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    Cited by:

    1. Ho Yub Jung & Soochahn Lee & Yong Seok Heo & Il Dong Yun, 2015. "Forest Walk Methods for Localizing Body Joints from Single Depth Image," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(9), pages 1-20, September.

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