SCAPE: shape completion and animation of people
Dragomir Anguelov, Praveen Srinivasan, Daphne Koller, Sebastian Thrun, Jim Rodgers, James Davis
In ACM Transactions on Graphics, 24(3), August 2005.
Abstract: We introduce the SCAPE method (Shape Completion and Animation for PEople)---a data-driven method for building a human shape model that spans variation in both subject shape and pose. The method is based on a representation that incorporates both articulated and non-rigid deformations. We learn a pose deformation model that derives the non-rigid surface deformation as a function of the pose of the articulated skeleton. We also learn a separate model of variation based on body shape. Our two models can be combined to produce 3D surface models with realistic muscle deformation for different people in different poses, when neither appear in the training set. We show how the model can be used for shape completion --- generating a complete surface mesh given a limited set of markers specifying the target shape. We present applications of shape completion to partial view completion and motion capture animation. In particular, our method is capable of constructing a high-quality animated surface model of a moving person, with realistic muscle deformation, using just a single static scan and a marker motion capture sequence of the person.
Keyword(s): animation, deformations, morphing, synthetic actors
Article URL: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1073204.1073207
BibTeX format:
@article{Anguelov:2005:SSC,
  author = {Dragomir Anguelov and Praveen Srinivasan and Daphne Koller and Sebastian Thrun and Jim Rodgers and James Davis},
  title = {SCAPE: shape completion and animation of people},
  journal = {ACM Transactions on Graphics},
  volume = {24},
  number = {3},
  pages = {408--416},
  month = aug,
  year = {2005},
}
Search for more articles by Dragomir Anguelov.
Search for more articles by Praveen Srinivasan.
Search for more articles by Daphne Koller.
Search for more articles by Sebastian Thrun.
Search for more articles by Jim Rodgers.
Search for more articles by James Davis.

Return to the search page.


graphbib: Powered by "bibsql" and "SQLite3."