Mariko Isogawa >Optical Non-Line-of-Sight Physics-based 3D Human Pose Estimation

Optical Non-Line-of-Sight Physics-based 3D Human Pose Estimation

We describe a method for 3D human pose estimation from transient images (i.e., a 3D spatio-temporal histogram of photons) acquired by an optical non-line-of-sight (NLOS) imaging system. Our method can perceive 3D human pose by `looking around corners' through the use of light indirectly reflected by the environment. We bring together a diverse set of technologies from NLOS imaging, human pose estimation and deep reinforcement learning to construct an end-to-end data processing pipeline that converts a raw stream of photon measurements into a full 3D human pose sequence estimate. Our contributions are the design of data representation process which includes (1) a learnable inverse point spread function (PSF) to convert raw transient images into a deep feature vector; (2) a neural humanoid control policy conditioned on the transient image feature and learned from interactions with a physics simulator; and (3) a data synthesis and augmentation strategy based on depth data that can be transferred to a real-world NLOS imaging system. Our preliminary experiments suggest that our method is able to generalize to real-world NLOS measurement to estimate physically-valid 3D human poses.

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Bibtex


@InProceedings{Isogawa_2020_CVPR,
author = {Isogawa, Mariko and Yuan, Ye and O'Toole, Matthew and Kitani, Kris M.},
title = {Optical Non-Line-of-Sight Physics-Based 3D Human Pose Estimation},
booktitle = {The IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR)},
month = {June},
year = {2020},
pages={7013-7022}
}