Published May 2017 | Version Submitted
Book Section - Chapter Open

Clinical patient tracking in the presence of transient and permanent occlusions via geodesic feature

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

This paper develops a method to use RGB-D cameras to track the motions of a human spinal cord injury patient undergoing spinal stimulation and physical rehabilitation. Because clinicians must remain close to the patient during training sessions, the patient is usually under permanent and transient occlusions due to the training equipment and the movements of the attending clinicians. These occlusions can significantly degrade the accuracy of existing human tracking methods. To improve the data association problem in these circumstances, we present a new global feature based on the geodesic distances of surface mesh points to a set of anchor points. Transient occlusions are handled via a multi-hypothesis tracking framework. To evaluate the method, we simulated different occlusion sizes on a data set captured from a human in varying movement patterns, and compared the proposed feature with other tracking methods. The results show that the proposed method achieves robustness to both surface deformations and transient occlusions.

Additional Information

© 2017 IEEE. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, NIBIB.

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Submitted - 1707.07139.pdf

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Eprint ID
79323
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20170725-083750305

Related works

Funding

NIH

Dates

Created
2017-07-25
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Updated
2021-11-15
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