Abstract

For many fundamental problems and applications in biomechanics, biology, and robotics, an in-depth understanding of animal locomotion is essential. To analyze the locomotion of animals, high-speed X-ray videos are recorded, in which anatomical landmarks of the locomotor system are of main interest and must be located. To date, several thousand sequences have been recorded, which makes a manual annotation of all landmarks practically impossible. Therefore, an automatization of X-ray landmark tracking in locomotion scenarios is worthwhile. However, tracking all landmarks of interest is a very challenging task, as severe self-occlusions of the animal and low contrast are present in the images due to the X-ray modality. For this reason, existing approaches are currently only applicable for very specific subsets of anatomical landmarks. In contrast, our goal is to present a holistic approach which models all anatomical landmarks in one consistent, probabilistic framework. While active appearance models (AAMs) provide a reasonable global modeling framework, they yield poor fitting results when applied on the full set of landmarks. In this paper, we propose to augment the AAM fitting process by imposing constraints from various sources. We derive a general probabilistic fitting approach and show how results of subset AAMs, local tracking, anatomical knowledge, and epipolar constraints can be included. The evaluation of our approach is based on 32 real-world datasets of five bird species which contain 175,942 ground-truth landmark positions provided by human experts. We show that our method clearly outperforms standard AAM fitting and provides reasonable tracking results for all landmark types. In addition, we show that the tracking accuracy of our approach is even sufficient to provide reliable three-dimensional landmark estimates for calibrated datasets.

Highlights

  • 1 Introduction For many fundamental problems of ongoing research in biomechanics, zoology, evolutionary biology, and robotics, the key element is a thorough knowledge on animal locomotion [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]

  • 5 Conclusions and further work In this paper, we presented augmented active appearance models, a general approach for AAM fitting in cases of non-stationary shape motions and non-discriminative local texture information

  • We applied our approach to the challenging scenario of landmark tracking in X-ray animal locomotion sequences, for which until now only methods for specific landmark subsets existed

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Summary

Introduction

For many fundamental problems of ongoing research in biomechanics, zoology, evolutionary biology, and robotics, the key element is a thorough knowledge on animal locomotion [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. This knowledge is obtained by analyzing skeletal movements of locomoting animals. As almost all parts of an animal’s skeletal system undergo severe self-occlusions during locomotion (a) AcquisitionSetup (b) TopView (c) SideView (cf. Figure 1), developing fully automatic tracking methods for this application is a challenging task

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