Investigating Pose Representations and Motion Contexts Modeling for 3D Motion Prediction

Predicting human motion from historical pose sequence is crucial for a machine to succeed in intelligent interactions with humans. One aspect that has been obviated so far, is the fact that how we represent the skeletal pose has a critical impact on the prediction results. Yet there is no effort tha...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on pattern analysis and machine intelligence 2023-01, Vol.45 (1), p.681-697
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Zhenguang, Wu, Shuang, Jin, Shuyuan, Ji, Shouling, Liu, Qi, Lu, Shijian, Cheng, Li
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Predicting human motion from historical pose sequence is crucial for a machine to succeed in intelligent interactions with humans. One aspect that has been obviated so far, is the fact that how we represent the skeletal pose has a critical impact on the prediction results. Yet there is no effort that investigates across different pose representation schemes. We conduct an indepth study on various pose representations with a focus on their effects on the motion prediction task. Moreover, recent approaches build upon off-the-shelf RNN units for motion prediction. These approaches process input pose sequence sequentially and inherently have difficulties in capturing long-term dependencies. In this paper, we propose a novel RNN architecture termed AHMR (Attentive Hierarchical Motion Recurrent network) for motion prediction which simultaneously models local motion contexts and a global context. We further explore a geodesic loss and a forward kinematics loss for the motion prediction task, which have more geometric significance than the widely employed L2 loss. Interestingly, we applied our method to a range of articulate objects including human, fish, and mouse. Empirical results show that our approach outperforms the state-of-the-art methods in short-term prediction and achieves much enhanced long-term prediction proficiency, such as retaining natural human-like motions over 50 seconds predictions. Our codes are released.
ISSN:0162-8828
1939-3539
2160-9292
DOI:10.1109/TPAMI.2021.3139918