Multimodal Interaction with a Wearable Augmented Reality System
IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications
Pattern Recognition Letters
Imaging Facial Physiology for the Detection of Deceit
International Journal of Computer Vision
Tracking of deformable human hand in real time as continuous input for gesture-based interaction
Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
Real-time hand tracking using a mean shift embedded particle filter
Pattern Recognition
Coordinating interactive vision behaviors for cognitive assistance
Computer Vision and Image Understanding
Bringing context into play: supporting game interaction through real-time context acquisition
Proceedings of the 2007 workshop on Multimodal interfaces in semantic interaction
A hybrid algorithm for tracking and following people using a robotic dog
Proceedings of the 3rd ACM/IEEE international conference on Human robot interaction
Temporal Nearest End-Effectors for Real-Time Full-Body Human Actions Recognition
AMDO '08 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects
Automatic Database Creation and Object's Model Learning
Knowledge Acquisition: Approaches, Algorithms and Applications
Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Interaction Sciences: Information Technology, Culture and Human
Real-Time Articulated Hand Detection and Pose Estimation
ISVC '09 Proceedings of the 5th International Symposium on Advances in Visual Computing: Part II
Robust hand posture recognition integrating multi-cue hand tracking
Edutainment'10 Proceedings of the Entertainment for education, and 5th international conference on E-learning and games
Proceedings of the 9th ACM SIGGRAPH Conference on Virtual-Reality Continuum and its Applications in Industry
Hand gesture for taking self portrait
HCII'11 Proceedings of the 14th international conference on Human-computer interaction: interaction techniques and environments - Volume Part II
3D gestural interaction for stereoscopic visualization on mobile devices
CAIP'11 Proceedings of the 14th international conference on Computer analysis of images and patterns - Volume Part II
Template-Based hand pose recognition using multiple cues
ACCV'06 Proceedings of the 7th Asian conference on Computer Vision - Volume Part II
A fast real-time skin detector for video sequences
ICIAR'05 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Image Analysis and Recognition
A modular approach to gesture recognition for interaction with a domestic service robot
ICIRA'11 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Intelligent Robotics and Applications - Volume Part II
Monocular vision-based target detection on dynamic transport infrastructures
EUROCAST'11 Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Computer Aided Systems Theory - Volume Part I
A large margin framework for single camera offline tracking with hybrid cues
Computer Vision and Image Understanding
Robust hand tracking by integrating appearance, location and depth cues
Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Internet Multimedia Computing and Service
Experiencing real 3D gestural interaction with mobile devices
Pattern Recognition Letters
Robust hand tracking in realtime using a single head-mounted RGB camera
HCI'13 Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Human-Computer Interaction: interaction modalities and techniques - Volume Part IV
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This paper introduces "Flocks of Features," a fast tracking method for non-rigid and highly articulated objects such as hands. It combines KLT features and a learned foreground color distribution to facilitate 2D position tracking from a monocular view. The tracker's benefits lie in its speed, its robustness against background noise, and its ability to track objects that undergo arbitrary rotations and vast and rapid deformations. We demonstrate tracker performance on hand tracking with a non-stationary camera in unconstrained indoor and outdoor environments. The tracker yields over threefold improvement over a CamShift tracker in terms of the number of frames tracked before the target was lost, and often more than one order of magnitude improvement in terms of the fractions of particular test sequences tracked successfully.