School of Computing, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdomf1
Abstract:
In recent years there has been an increased interest in the modeling and recognition of human activities involving highly structured and semantically rich behavior such as dance, aerobics, and sign language. A novel approach for automatically acquiring stochastic models of the high-level structure of an activity without the assumption of any prior knowledge is presented. The process involves temporal segmentation into plausible atomic behavior components and the use of variable-length Markov models for the efficient representation of behaviors. Experimental results that demonstrate the synthesis of realistic sample behaviors and the performance of models for long-term temporal prediction are presented.