Toward understanding the limits of gait recognition

Author(s):  
Zongyi Liu ◽  
Laura Malave ◽  
Adebola Osuntogun ◽  
Preksha Sudhakar ◽  
Sudeep Sarkar
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Linuo Wang

The current technology related to athlete gait recognition has shortcomings such as complicated equipment and high cost, and there are also certain problems in recognition accuracy and recognition efficiency. In order to improve the efficiency of athletes’ gait recognition, this paper studies the different recognition technologies of athletes based on machine learning and spectral feature technology and applies computer vision technology to sports. Moreover, according to the calf angular velocity signal, the occurrence of leg movement is detected in real time, and the gait cycle is accurately divided to reduce the influence of the signal unrelated to the behavior on the recognition process. In addition, this study proposes a gait behavior recognition method based on event-driven strategies. This method uses a gyroscope as the main sensor and uses a wearable sensor node to collect the angular velocity signals of the legs and waist. In addition, this study analyzes the performance of the algorithm proposed by this paper through experimental research. The comparison results show that the method proposed by this paper has improved the number of recognition action types and accuracy and has certain advantages from the perspective of computation and scalability.


Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1013
Author(s):  
Sayan Maity ◽  
Mohamed Abdel-Mottaleb ◽  
Shihab S. Asfour

Biometric identification using surveillance video has attracted the attention of many researchers as it can be applicable not only for robust identification but also personalized activity monitoring. In this paper, we present a novel multimodal recognition system that extracts frontal gait and low-resolution face images from frontal walking surveillance video clips to perform efficient biometric recognition. The proposed study addresses two important issues in surveillance video that did not receive appropriate attention in the past. First, it consolidates the model-free and model-based gait feature extraction approaches to perform robust gait recognition only using the frontal view. Second, it uses a low-resolution face recognition approach which can be trained and tested using low-resolution face information. This eliminates the need for obtaining high-resolution face images to create the gallery, which is required in the majority of low-resolution face recognition techniques. Moreover, the classification accuracy on high-resolution face images is considerably higher. Previous studies on frontal gait recognition incorporate assumptions to approximate the average gait cycle. However, we quantify the gait cycle precisely for each subject using only the frontal gait information. The approaches available in the literature use the high resolution images obtained in a controlled environment to train the recognition system. However, in our proposed system we train the recognition algorithm using the low-resolution face images captured in the unconstrained environment. The proposed system has two components, one is responsible for performing frontal gait recognition and one is responsible for low-resolution face recognition. Later, score level fusion is performed to fuse the results of the frontal gait recognition and the low-resolution face recognition. Experiments conducted on the Face and Ocular Challenge Series (FOCS) dataset resulted in a 93.5% Rank-1 for frontal gait recognition and 82.92% Rank-1 for low-resolution face recognition, respectively. The score level multimodal fusion resulted in 95.9% Rank-1 recognition, which demonstrates the superiority and robustness of the proposed approach.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruben Delgado-Escano ◽  
Francisco M. Castro ◽  
Nicolas Guil ◽  
Vicky Kalogeiton ◽  
Manuel J. Marin-Jimenez
Keyword(s):  

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