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research article

Human motion capture driven by orientation measurements

Molet, T.
•
Boulic, R.  
•
Thalmann, D.  
1999
Presence

Motion capture techniques are rarely based on orientation measurements for two main reasons: (1) optical motion capture systems are designed for tracking object position rather than their orientation (which can be deduced from several trackers), (2) known animation techniques, like inverse kinematics or geometric algorithms, require position targets constantly, but orientation inputs only occasionally. We propose a complete human motion capture technique based essentially on orientation measurements. The position measurement is used only for recovering the global position of the performer. This method allows fast tracking of human gestures for interactive applications as well as high rate recording. Several motion capture optimizations, including the multijoint technique, improve the posture realism. This work is well suited for magnetic based systems that rely more on orientation registration (in our environment) than position measurements that necessitate difficult system calibration

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
research article
DOI
10.1162/105474699566161
Web of Science ID

WOS:000080365000006

Author(s)
Molet, T.
•
Boulic, R.  
•
Thalmann, D.  
Date Issued

1999

Publisher

MIT Press

Published in
Presence
Volume

8

Issue

2

Start page

187

End page

203

Subjects

computer animation

•

motion control

•

motion estimation

•

position measurement

•

real-time systems

•

virtual reality

Note

Comput. Graphics Lab., Swiss Federal Inst. of Technol., Lausanne, Switzerland

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/20.500.14299/239093
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