Examinando por Autor "Muñoz-Salinas, Rafael"
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Ítem 3D human pose estimation from depth maps using a deep combination of poses(Elsevier, 2018-08) Marín-Jiménez, Manuel J.; Romero-Ramirez, Francisco J.; Muñoz-Salinas, Rafael; Medina-Carnicer, RafaelMany real-world applications require the estimation of human body joints for higher-level tasks as, for example, human behaviour understanding. In recent years, depth sensors have become a popular approach to obtain three-dimensional information. The depth maps generated by these sensors provide information that can be employed to disambiguate the poses observed in two-dimensional images. This work addresses the problem of 3D human pose estimation from depth maps employing a Deep Learning approach. We propose a model, named Deep Depth Pose (DDP), which receives a depth map containing a person and a set of predefined 3D prototype poses and returns the 3D position of the body joints of the person. In particular, DDP is defined as a ConvNet that computes the specific weights needed to linearly combine the prototypes for the given input. We have thoroughly evaluated DDP on the challenging ‘ITOP’ and ‘UBC3V’ datasets, which respectively depict realistic and synthetic samples, defining a new state-of-the-art on themÍtem Fiducial Objects: Custom Design and Evaluation(MDPI, 2023-12) García-Ruiz, Pablo; Romero-Ramirez, Francisco J.; Muñoz-Salinas, Rafael; Marín-Jiménez, Manuel J.; Medina-Carnicer, RafaelCamera pose estimation is vital in fields like robotics, medical imaging, and augmented reality. Fiducial markers, specifically ArUco and Apriltag, are preferred for their efficiency. However, their accuracy and viewing angle are limited when used as single markers. Custom fiducial objects have been developed to address these limitations by attaching markers to 3D objects, enhancing visibility from multiple viewpoints and improving precision. Existing methods mainly use square markers on non-square object faces, leading to inefficient space use. This paper introduces a novel approach for creating fiducial objects with custom-shaped markers that optimize face coverage, enhancing space utilization and marker detectability at greater distances. Furthermore, we present a technique for the precise configuration estimation of these objects using multiviewpoint images. We provide the research community with our code, tutorials, and an application to facilitate the building and calibration of these objects. Our empirical analysis assesses the effectiveness of various fiducial objects for pose estimation across different conditions, such as noise levels, blur, and scale variations. The results suggest that our customized markers significantly outperform traditional square markers, marking a positive advancement in fiducial marker-based pose estimation methods.Ítem Large-Scale Indoor Camera Positioning Using Fiducial Markers(MDPI, 2024-07) García-Ruiz, Pablo; Romero-Ramirez, Francisco J; Muñoz-Salinas, Rafael; Marín-Jiménez, Manuel J; Medina-Carnicer, RafaelEstimating the pose of a large set of fixed indoor cameras is a requirement for certain applications in augmented reality, autonomous navigation, video surveillance, and logistics. However, accurately mapping the positions of these cameras remains an unsolved problem. While providing partial solutions, existing alternatives are limited by their dependence on distinct environmental features, the requirement for large overlapping camera views, and specific conditions. This paper introduces a novel approach to estimating the pose of a large set of cameras using a small subset of fiducial markers printed on regular pieces of paper. By placing the markers in areas visible to multiple cameras, we can obtain an initial estimation of the pair-wise spatial relationship between them. The markers can be moved throughout the environment to obtain the relationship between all cameras, thus creating a graph connecting all cameras. In the final step, our method performs a full optimization, minimizing the reprojection errors of the observed markers and enforcing physical constraints, such as camera and marker coplanarity and control points. We validated our approach using novel artificial and real datasets with varying levels of complexity. Our experiments demonstrated superior performance over existing state-of-the-art techniques and increased effectiveness in real-world applications. Accompanying this paper, we provide the research community with access to our code, tutorials, and an application framework to support the deployment of our methodology.Ítem ReSLAM: Reusable SLAM with heterogeneous cameras(Elsevier, 2024-01) Romero-Ramirez, Francisco J; Muñoz-Salinas, Rafael; Marín-Jiménez, Manuel J; Carmona-Poyato, Angel; Medina-Carnicer, RafaelState-of-the-art SLAM methods are designed to work only with the type of camera employed to create the map, and little attention has been paid to the reusability of the maps created. In other words, the maps generated by current methods can only be reused with the same camera employed to create them. This paper presents a novel SLAM approach that allows maps generated with one camera to be used by other cameras with different resolutions and optics. Our system allows, for instance, creating highly detailed maps processed off-line with high-end computers, to be reused later by low-powered devices (e.g. a drone or robot) using a different camera. The first map, called base map, can be reused with other cameras and dynamically adapted by creating an augmented map. The principal idea of our method is a bottom-up pyramidal representation of the images that allows us to match keypoints between different camera types seamlessly. The experiments conducted validate our proposal, showing that it outperforms the state-of-the-art approaches, namely ORBSLAM, OpenVSLAM and UcoSLAM.Ítem Speeded up detection of squared fiducial markers(Elsevier, 2018-08) Romero-Ramirez, Francisco J.; Muñoz-Salinas, Rafael; Medina-Carnicer, RafaelSquared planar markers have become a popular method for pose estimation in applications such as autonomous robots, unmanned vehicles and virtual trainers. The markers allow estimating the position of a monocular camera with minimal cost, high robustness, and speed. One only needs to create markers with a regular printer, place them in the desired environment so as to cover the working area, and then registering their location from a set of images. Nevertheless, marker detection is a time-consuming process, especially as the image dimensions grows. Modern cameras are able to acquire high resolutions images, but fiducial marker systems are not adapted in terms of computing speed. This paper proposes a multi-scale strategy for speeding up marker detection in video sequences by wisely selecting the most appropriate scale for detection, identification and corner estimation. The experiments conducted show that the proposed approach outperforms the state-of-the-art methods without sacrificing accuracy or robustness. Our method is up to 40 times faster than the state-of-the-art method, achieving over 1000 fps in 4 K images without any parallelizationÍtem sSLAM: Speeded-Up Visual SLAM Mixing Artificial Markers and Temporary Keypoints(MDPI, 2023-02-16) Romero-Ramirez, Francisco J.; Muñoz-Salinas, Rafael; Marín-Jiménez, Manuel J.; Cazorla, Miguel; Medina-Carnicer, RafaelEnvironment landmarks are generally employed by visual SLAM (vSLAM) methods in the form of keypoints. However, these landmarks are unstable over time because they belong to areas that tend to change, e.g., shadows or moving objects. To solve this, some other authors have proposed the combination of keypoints and artificial markers distributed in the environment so as to facilitate the tracking process in the long run. Artificial markers are special elements (similar to beacons) that can be permanently placed in the environment to facilitate tracking. In any case, these systems keep a set of keypoints that is not likely to be reused, thus unnecessarily increasing the computing time required for tracking. This paper proposes a novel visual SLAM approach that efficiently combines keypoints and artificial markers, allowing for a substantial reduction in the computing time and memory required without noticeably degrading the tracking accuracy. In the first stage, our system creates a map of the environment using both keypoints and artificial markers, but once the map is created, the keypoints are removed and only the markers are kept. Thus, our map stores only long-lasting features of the environment (i.e., the markers). Then, for localization purposes, our algorithm uses the marker information along with temporary keypoints created just in the time of tracking, which are removed after a while. Since our algorithm keeps only a small subset of recent keypoints, it is faster than the state-of-the-art vSLAM approaches. The experimental results show that our proposed sSLAM compares favorably with ORB-SLAM2, ORB-SLAM3, OpenVSLAM and UcoSLAM in terms of speed, without statistically significant differences in accuracyÍtem Tracking fiducial markers with discriminative correlation filters(Elsevier, 2021-03) Romero-Ramirez, Francisco J.; Muñoz-Salinas, Rafael; Medina-Carnicer, RafaelIn the last few years, squared fiducial markers have become a popular and efficient tool to solve monocular localization and tracking problems at a very low cost. Nevertheless, marker detection is affected by noise and blur: small camera movements may cause image blurriness that prevents marker detection. The contribution of this paper is two-fold. First, it proposes a novel approach for estimating the location of markers in images using a set of Discriminative Correlation Filters (DCF). The proposed method outperforms state-of-the-art methods for marker detection and standard DCFs in terms of speed, precision, and sensitivity. Our method is robust to blur and scales very well with image resolution, obtaining more than 200fps in HD images using a single CPU thread. As a second contribution, this paper proposes a method for camera localization with marker maps employing a predictive approach to detect visible markers with high precision, speed, and robustness to blurriness. The method has been compared to the state-of-the-art SLAM methods obtaining, better accuracy, sensitivity, and speed. The proposed approach is publicly available as part of the ArUco libraryÍtem UCO Physical Rehabilitation: New Dataset and Study of Human Pose Estimation Methods on Physical Rehabilitation Exercises(MDPI, 2023-10) Aguilar-Ortega, Rafael; Berral-Soler, Rafael; Jiménez-Velasco, Isabel; Romero-Ramírez, Francisco J.; García-Marín, Manuel; Zafra-Palma, Jorge; Muñoz-Salinas, Rafael; Medina-Carnicer, Rafael; Marín-Jiménez, Manuel J.