Spatio-temporal structure of human motion primitives and its application to motion prediction

2016 ◽  
Vol 75 ◽  
pp. 288-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wataru Takano ◽  
Hirotaka Imagawa ◽  
Yoshihiko Nakamura
Author(s):  
Chuanqi Zang ◽  
Mingtao Pei ◽  
Yu Kong

Human motion prediction is a task where we anticipate future motion based on past observation. Previous approaches rely on the access to large datasets of skeleton data, and thus are difficult to be generalized to novel motion dynamics with limited training data. In our work, we propose a novel approach named Motion Prediction Network (MoPredNet) for few-short human motion prediction. MoPredNet can be adapted to predicting new motion dynamics using limited data, and it elegantly captures long-term dependency in motion dynamics. Specifically, MoPredNet dynamically selects the most informative poses in the streaming motion data as masked poses. In addition, MoPredNet improves its encoding capability of motion dynamics by adaptively learning spatio-temporal structure from the observed poses and masked poses. We also propose to adapt MoPredNet to novel motion dynamics based on accumulated motion experiences and limited novel motion dynamics data. Experimental results show that our method achieves better performance over state-of-the-art methods in motion prediction.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emre Aksan ◽  
Manuel Kaufmann ◽  
Peng Cao ◽  
Otmar Hilliges

Author(s):  
Bin Li ◽  
Jian Tian ◽  
Zhongfei Zhang ◽  
Hailin Feng ◽  
Xi Li

Author(s):  
Thomas C. van Leth ◽  
Hidde Leijnse ◽  
Aart Overeem ◽  
Remko Uijlenhoet

AbstractWe investigate the spatio-temporal structure of rainfall at spatial scales from 7m to over 200 km in the Netherlands. We used data from two networks of laser disdrometers with complementary interstation distances in two Dutch cities (comprising five and six disdrometers, respectively) and a Dutch nationwide network of 31 automatic rain gauges. The smallest aggregation interval for which raindrop size distributions were collected by the disdrometers was 30 s, while the automatic rain gauges provided 10-min rainfall sums. This study aims to supplement other micro-γ investigations (usually performed in the context of spatial rainfall variability within a weather radar pixel) with new data, while characterizing the correlation structure across an extended range of scales. To quantify the spatio-temporal variability, we employ a two-parameter exponential model fitted to the spatial correlograms and characterize the parameters of the model as a function of the temporal aggregation interval. This widely used method allows for a meaningful comparison with seven other studies across contrasting climatic settings all around the world. We also separately analyzed the intermittency of the rainfall observations. We show that a single parameterization, consisting of a two-parameter exponential spatial model as a function of interstation distance combined with a power-law model for decorrelation distance as a function of aggregation interval, can coherently describe rainfall variability (both spatial correlation and intermittency) across a wide range of scales. Limiting the range of scales to those typically found in micro-γ variability studies (including four of the seven studies to which we compare our results) skews the parameterization and reduces its applicability to larger scales.


2021 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
pp. 7760-7775
Author(s):  
Maosen Li ◽  
Siheng Chen ◽  
Yangheng Zhao ◽  
Ya Zhang ◽  
Yanfeng Wang ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document