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research article

Conferring human action recognition skills to life-like agents

Emering, L.  
•
Boulic, R.  
•
Thalmann, D.  
1999
Applied Artificial Intelligence Journal

Most of today's virtual environments are populated with some kind of autonomous life-like agents. Such agents follow a preprogrammed sequence of behaviours that excludes the user as a participating entity in the virtual society. In order to make inhabited virtual reality an attractive place for information exchange and social interaction, we need to equip the autonomous agents with some perception and interpretation skills. We present one skill: human action recognition. By opposition to human-computer interfaces that focus on speech or hand gestures, we propose a full-body integration of the user. We present a model of human actions along with a real time recognition system. To cover the bilateral aspect in human-computer interfaces, we also discuss some action response issues. In particular, we describe a motion management library that solves animation continuity and mixing problems. Finally, we illustrate our system with two examples and discuss what we have learned

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
research article
DOI
10.1080/088395199117379
Web of Science ID

WOS:000080063500008

Author(s)
Emering, L.  
Boulic, R.  
Thalmann, D.  
Date Issued

1999

Published in
Applied Artificial Intelligence Journal
Volume

13

Start page

539

End page

65

Subjects

computer animation

•

human factors

•

image recognition

•

real-time systems

•

software agents

•

user modelling

•

virtual reality

Note

Presented at Applied Artificial Intelligence '99, Nagoya, Japan

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
VRLAB  
SCI-IC-RB  
Available on Infoscience
January 16, 2007
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/239104
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