VI-Net—View-Invariant Quality of Human Movement Assessment

We propose a view-invariant method towards the assessment of the quality of human movements which does not rely on skeleton data. Our end-to-end convolutional neural network consists of two stages, where at first a view-invariant trajectory descriptor for each body joint is generated from RGB images...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) Vol. 20; no. 18; p. 5258
Main Authors: Sardari, Faegheh, Paiement, Adeline, Hannuna, Sion, Mirmehdi, Majid
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Switzerland MDPI 15.09.2020
MDPI AG
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ISSN:1424-8220, 1424-8220
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:We propose a view-invariant method towards the assessment of the quality of human movements which does not rely on skeleton data. Our end-to-end convolutional neural network consists of two stages, where at first a view-invariant trajectory descriptor for each body joint is generated from RGB images, and then the collection of trajectories for all joints are processed by an adapted, pre-trained 2D convolutional neural network (CNN) (e.g., VGG-19 or ResNeXt-50) to learn the relationship amongst the different body parts and deliver a score for the movement quality. We release the only publicly-available, multi-view, non-skeleton, non-mocap, rehabilitation movement dataset (QMAR), and provide results for both cross-subject and cross-view scenarios on this dataset. We show that VI-Net achieves average rank correlation of 0.66 on cross-subject and 0.65 on unseen views when trained on only two views. We also evaluate the proposed method on the single-view rehabilitation dataset KIMORE and obtain 0.66 rank correlation against a baseline of 0.62.
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ISSN:1424-8220
1424-8220
DOI:10.3390/s20185258