Section: Partnerships and Cooperations
National Initiatives
Motion analysis of laboratory rodents
In order to evaluate the scalabililty of previous work on motion analysis of laboratory rodents, a collaboration has been initiated with the Institut Clinique de la Souris (ICS), in Institut de Génétique et de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire (IGBMC). This institute is dedicated to phenotypying of mice and requires reliable motion analysis tools. A multicamera plateform has been deployed at ICS and will be exploited next year for tests ranging from one to two hundreds mice.
ANR
ANR project Achmov – Accurate Human Modeling in Videos
The technological advancements made over the past decade now allow the acquisition of vast amounts of visual information through the use of image capturing devices like digital cameras or camcorders. A central subject of interest in video are the humans, their motions, actions or expressions, the way they collaborate and communicate. Analyzing video data of humans, collected for complex real-world events–extracting high-fidelity content, transferring raw data into knowledge–, detecting, reconstructing or understanding human motion are problems of key importance for the advancement of a variety of technological fields, including video coding, entertainment, culture, animation and virtual reality, intelligent human-computer interfaces, protection and security. The visual analysis of humans in real-world environments, indoors and outdoors, faces major scientific and computational challenges however. The proportions of the human body vary largely across individuals, any single human body has many degrees of freedom due to articulations, and individual limbs deform due to moving muscles and clothing. Finally, real-world events involve multiple interacting humans occluded by each other or by other objects, and the scene conditions may also vary due to camera motion or lighting changes. All these factors make appropriate models of human structure, motion and action difficult to construct and difficult to estimate from images. The goal of ACHMOV is to extract detailed representations of multiple interacting humans in real-world environments in an integrated fashion through a synergy between detection, figure-ground segmentation and body part labeling, accurate 3D geometric methods for kinematic and shape modeling, and large-scale statistical learning techniques. By integrating the complementary expertise of two teams (one French, MORPHEO and one Romanian, CLVP), with solid prior track records in the field, there are considerable opportunities to move towards processing complex real world scenes of multiple interacting people, and be able to extract rich semantic representations with high fidelity. This would enable interpretation, recognition and synthesis at unprecedented levels of accuracy and in considerably more realistic setups than currently considered. This project was kicked off on November 26th, 2015, in Bucharest, Romania.
Competitivity Clusters
FUI project Creamove
Creamove is a collaboration between the Morpheo team of the Inria Grenoble Rhône-Alpes, the 4D View Solution company specialised in multi-camera acquisition systems, the SIP company specialised in multi-media and interactive applications and a choreographer. The objective is to develop new interactive and artistic applications where humans can interact in 3D with virtual characters built from real videos. Dancer performances will be pre-recorded in 3D and used on-line to design new movement sequences based on inputs coming from human bodies captured in real time. Website: http://www.creamove.fr .