PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Capturing movements of actors and athletes in real time with conventional video cameras

Capturing movements of actors and athletes in real time with conventional  video cameras
2012-08-28
(Press-News.org) This press release is available in German.

In the computer graphics (CG) animated comedy "Ted," which is running now in the cinemas, Ted is a teddy bear who came to life as the result of a childhood wish of John Bennett (Mark Wahlberg) and has refused to leave his side ever since. CG Animated characters like "Ted" have become a standard of Hollywood's movie productions since the blockbuster "Avatar" with its blue-skinned computer-animated characters won three Oscars and brought in three billion US dollars, digital animated characters have become a standard of Hollywood's movie productions.

While movies like "Pirates of the Caribbean" or "Ted" still combined real actors with digital counterparts, the well-known director Steven Spielberg focused entirely on virtual actors in "The Adventures of Tintin." He used the so-called motion capture approach, which also animated Ted. Motion capture means that an actor wears a suit with special markers attached. These reflect infrared light sent and received by a camera system installed in a studio. In this way, the system captures the movements of the actor. Specialists use this as input to transfer exactly the same movements to the virtual character.

"The real actors dislike wearing these suits, as they constrain their movements," explains Christian Theobalt, professor of computer science at Saarland University and head of the research group "Graphics, Vision & Video" at the Max-Planck-Institute for Informatics (MPI). Theobalt points out that this has not changed since animating "Gollum" in the trilogy "Lord of the Rings." Hence, together with his MPI-colleagues Nils Hasler, Carsten Stoll and Jürgen Gall of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Theobalt developed a new approach that both works without markers and captures motions in realtime. "The part which is scientifically new is the way in which we represent and compute the filmed scene. It enables new speed in capturing and visualizing the movements with normal video cameras," Theobalt explains.

Implemented, it looks like this: The video cameras record a researcher turning cartwheels. The computer gets the camera footage as input and computes the skeleton motion of the actor so quickly that you cannot perceive any delay between the movement and its overlay, a red skeleton. According to Theobalt, the new computing approach also works if the movements of several persons have to be captured, or if they are obscured by objects in the studio and against a noisy background.

"Therefore we are convinced that our approach even enables motion capture outdoors, for example in the Olympic stadium," Theobalt points out. Athletes could use it to run faster, to jump higher or to throw the spear farther. Spectators in the stadium or in front of the TV could use the technology to tell the difference between first and second place. Besides entertainment, medical science could also benefit from the new approach, for example by helping doctors to check healing after operations on joints.

In the next months his MPI colleagues Nils Hasler and Carsten Stoll will found a company to transform the software prototype into a real product. "They've already had some meetings with representatives sent by companies in Hollywood," Theobalt says.

Technical background

The new approach requires technology which is quite cheap. You need no special cameras, but their recording has to be synchronized. According to the MPI researcher, five cameras are enough that the approach works. But they used twelve cameras for the published results. The way they present the scene to the computer and let it compute makes the difference. Hence, they built a three-dimensional model of the actor whose motions should be captured. The result is a motion skeleton with 58 joints. They model the proportions of the body as so-called sums of three dimensional Gaussians, whose visualisation looks like a ball. The radius of the ball varies according to the dimensions of the real person. The resulting three-dimensional model resembles the mascot of a famous tire manufacturer.

The images of the video cameras are presented as two-dimensional Gaussians that cover image blobs that are consistent in color. To capture the person's movement, the software continuously computes the best way that the 2D and 3D Gaussians can overlay each other while fitting accurately. The Saarbrücken computer scientists are able to compute these model-to-image similarities in a very efficient way. Therefore, they can capture the filmed motion and visualize it in real-time. All they need is just a few cameras, some computing power and mathematics.



INFORMATION:

Computer Science on the Saarland University Campus

Apart from the Saarland University chair in computer science and Max Planck Institute for Informatics, there are several other research institutes exploring new information technologies and their impact on society. The German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), the Max Planck Institute for Software Systems, the Center for Bioinformatics, the Intel Visual Computing Institute, Center for IT-Security, Privacy and Accountability, and the Cluster of Excellence on "Multimodal Computing and Interaction" can also be found there.

More Information:

Carsten Stoll, Nils Hasler, Juergen Gall, Hans-Peter Seidel, Christian Theobalt,
Fast Articulated Motion Tracking using a Sums of Gaussians Body Model

Video online

www.mpi-inf.mpg.de/~theobalt/sog.mp4

For further questions please contact:

Prof. Dr. Christian Theobalt
Campus E 1.4
66123 Saarbrücken
E-Mail: theobalt@mpii.de
Tel.: +49 681 9325-428

Gordon Bolduan
Science Communication
Cluster of Excellence "Multimodal Computing and Interaction"
E-Mail: bolduan@mmci.uni-saarland.de
Tel.: +49 681 302-70741


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Capturing movements of actors and athletes in real time with conventional  video cameras

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

ESC Acute Cardiovascular Care Association launched

2012-08-28
ACCA was previously the ESC Working Group on Acute Cardiac Care. Today it becomes one of six ESC Associations, whose presidents are invited to ESC Board meetings. "It will be easier to inform the ESC Board about the activities of the association," said Professor Christiaan Vrints (Belgium), outgoing chairman of the Working Group on Acute Cardiac Care. "We will also have a bigger impact on the policies and the development of the ESC as an organisation." The Working Group on Acute Cardiac Care had the largest and fastest growing membership of ESC working groups. Over the ...

Study of tribe could help find East Asian skin color genes

2012-08-28
Genetic investigation of a Malaysian tribe may tell scientists why East Asians have light skin but lower skin cancer rates than Europeans, according to a team of international researchers. Understanding the differences could lead to a better way to protect people from skin cancer. While the genetics of skin color is largely unknown, past research using zebrafish by Penn State College of Medicine's Keith Cheng, M.D., Ph.D., identified the gene in Europeans that differs from West Africans and contributes to a lighter skin color. Mutations in the genes SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 ...

Trudeau researchers identify unforeseen regulation of the anti-bacterial immune response

Trudeau researchers identify unforeseen regulation of the anti-bacterial immune response
2012-08-28
Saranac Lake, N.Y. – August 28, 2012 — New research from the laboratory of Dr. Andrea Cooper at the Trudeau Institute, just published in the European Journal of Immunology, holds promise for the improved prevention and treatment of bacterial infections and the life-threatening complications of chronic inflammation that can result from them. The publication title is "Nitric oxide inhibits the accumulation of CD4+CD44hiTbet+CD69lo T cells in mycobacterial infection". Following a typical bacterial infection, the immune response is manifested by the accumulation of immune ...

NASA watching Issac's approach to US Gulf Coast

NASA watching Issacs approach to US Gulf Coast
2012-08-28
VIDEO: An animation of satellite observations from August 26-28, 2012 shows Tropical Storm Isaac moving past the Florida Keys and into the Gulf of Mexico, nearing landfall in the U.S. Gulf... Click here for more information. NASA satellites have been providing valuable data to forecasters at the National Hurricane Center watching the development and progression of powerful Tropical Storm Isaac as it heads for landfall. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer ...

By detecting smallest virus, researchers open possibilities for early disease detection

By detecting smallest virus, researchers open possibilities for early disease detection
2012-08-28
NEW YORK, August 28, 2012 – Researchers at Polytechnic Institute of New York University (NYU-Poly) have created an ultra-sensitive biosensor capable of identifying the smallest single virus particles in solution, an advance that may revolutionize early disease detection in a point-of-care setting and shrink test result wait times from weeks to minutes. Stephen Arnold, university professor of applied physics and member of the Othmer-Jacobs Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, and researchers of NYU-Poly's MicroParticle PhotoPhysics Laboratory for BioPhotonics ...

Chinese credit card usage growing quickly, MU study finds

2012-08-28
COLUMBIA, Mo. — In the past two decades, the Chinese economy has undergone many drastic reforms in an effort to compete more effectively on the international market. These reforms included allowing foreign banks to offer credit cards to Chinese citizens. Now, researchers at the University of Missouri have found about 30 percent of Chinese urban households now own at least one credit card and the growth rate of credit card adoption has been an average of 40 percent per year between 2004 and 2009. Rui Yao, an assistant professor of personal financial planning in the College ...

NRL researchers observe bright arctic clouds formed by exhaust from final space shuttle launch

NRL researchers observe bright arctic clouds formed by exhaust from final space shuttle launch
2012-08-28
Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) scientist Dr. Michael Stevens is leading an international consortium of scientists in tracking the rapid transport of the exhaust plume from the final launch of the space shuttle in July 2011. The team has found that the plume moved quickly to the Arctic, forming unusually bright polar mesospheric clouds (PMCs) there a day after launch. Understanding the rapid transport of high altitude exhaust plumes near 105 km is providing new insight into the effects of winds at the bottom edge of the space weather regime towards improved forecasts ...

"For the Love of Scott!" by Jo Hamilton Tops 30,000 Readers

2012-08-28
Jo Hamilton took almost three decades to put her brother's tragic story on paper. In less than ten months, tens of thousands of readers have purchase her paperback book or downloaded the electronic version of For the Love of Scott!. People from the USA, the United Kingdom, Europe, and Asia bought or downloaded the book. Scott Hamilton was a smart, talented and handsome Iowa farm boy awaiting a shot at a minor league baseball pitching career with the White Sox. His life was right on track. In an instant, Scott's dreams faded into his family's worst nightmare. His parents ...

Bridesandlovers.com - the Premier International Russian Dating Site for Men Seeking Russian Women - is Pleased to Announce Record Payments to its Affiliates in 2012

Bridesandlovers.com - the Premier International Russian Dating Site for Men Seeking Russian Women - is Pleased to Announce Record Payments to its Affiliates in 2012
2012-08-28
Bridesandlovers.com - the premier international Russian dating site for men seeking marriage and romance with Russian women - is pleased to announce that earnings paid to partners of its affiliate program for 2012 have have increased 100% month on month. This affiliate program - which features a number of different payment plans and commission rates is considered by many to be one of best affiliate programs in the dating business. By signing up for this affiliate program at www.luvbucks.com and then advertising Bridesandlovers.com on their websites, affiliates can start ...

Biggest Kizomba Event in the USA - 2012 San Francisco Kizomba Festival Presented by Rodchata

2012-08-28
When Rodney Aquino started featuring Kizomba workshops in July 2009 at the 1st San Francisco Bachata Festival, a good amount of people were curious. This followed by 2nd Reno Bachata Festival where not only kizomba was featured and also Zouk Lambada. The Kizomba dance craze started to spread slowly but surely. A kizomba class every Tuesday soon followed at the Glas Kat in San Francisco taught by Rodney Rodchata. There were like 10 to 12 participants. Today, in the year 2012, the kizomba community in the Bay Area has grown and the buzz is stronger than before! Every ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

High-precision NEID spectrograph helps confirm first Gaia astrometric planet discovery

ABT-263 treatment rejuvenates aged skin and enhances wound healing

The challenge of pursuit – how saccades enable mammals to simultaneously chase prey and navigate through complex environments

Music can touch the heart, even inside the womb

Contribution of cannabis use disorder to new cases of schizophrenia has almost tripled over the past 17 years

Listening for multiple mental health disorders

Visualization of chemical phenomena in the microscopic world using semiconductor image sensor

Virus that causes COVID-19 increases risk of cardiac events

Half a degree rise in global warming will triple area of Earth too hot for humans

Identifying ED patients likely to have health-related social needs

Yo-yo dieting may significantly increase kidney disease risk in people with type 1 diabetes

Big cities fuel inequality

Financial comfort and prosociality

Painted lady butterflies migrations and genetics

Globetrotting not in the genes

Patient advocates from NCCN guidelines panels share their ‘united by unique’ stories for world cancer day

Innovative apatite nanoparticles for advancing the biocompatibility of implanted biodevices

Study debunks nuclear test misinformation following 2024 Iran earthquake

Quantum machine offers peek into “dance” of cosmic bubbles

How hungry fat cells could someday starve cancer to death

Breakthrough in childhood brain cancer research could heal treatment-resistant tumors, keep them in remission

Research discovery halts childhood brain tumor before it forms

Scientists want to throw a wrench in the gears of cancer’s growth

WSU researcher pioneers new study model with clues to anti-aging

EU awards €5 grant to 18 international researchers in critical raw materials, the “21st century's gold”

FRONTIERS launches dedicated call for early-career science journalists

Why do plants transport energy so efficiently and quickly?

AI boosts employee work experiences

Neurogenetics leader decodes trauma's imprint on the brain through groundbreaking PTSD research

High PM2.5 levels in Delhi-NCR largely independent of Punjab-Haryana crop fires

[Press-News.org] Capturing movements of actors and athletes in real time with conventional video cameras