Abstract

Gait recognition is a popular remote biometric identification technology. Its robustness against view variation is one of the challenges in the field of gait recognition. In this paper, the second-generation Kinect (2G–Kinect) is used as a tool to build a 3D–skeleton-based gait dataset, which includes both 2D silhouette images captured by 2G–Kinect and their corresponding 3D coordinates of skeleton joints. Given this dataset, a human walking model is constructed. Referring to the walking model, the length of some specific skeletons is selected as the static features, and the angles of swing limbs as the dynamic features, which are verified to be view-invariant. In addition, the gait recognition abilities of the static and dynamic features are investigated respectively. Given the investigation, a view-invariant gait recognition scheme is proposed based on the matching-level-fusion of the static and dynamic features, and the nearest neighbor (NN) method is used for recognition. Comparison between the existing Kinect-based gait recognition method and the proposed one on different datasets show that the proposed one has better recognition performance.

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