English
 
Help Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

ITEM ACTIONSEXPORT

Released

Paper

Learning to Refine Human Pose Estimation

MPS-Authors
/persons/resource/persons185317

Fieraru,  Mihai
Computer Vision and Multimodal Computing, MPI for Informatics, Max Planck Society;

/persons/resource/persons79309

Khoreva,  Anna
Computer Vision and Multimodal Computing, MPI for Informatics, Max Planck Society;

/persons/resource/persons45196

Pishchulin,  Leonid
Computer Vision and Multimodal Computing, MPI for Informatics, Max Planck Society;

/persons/resource/persons45383

Schiele,  Bernt
Computer Vision and Multimodal Computing, MPI for Informatics, Max Planck Society;

External Resource
No external resources are shared
Fulltext (restricted access)
There are currently no full texts shared for your IP range.
Fulltext (public)
There are no public fulltexts stored in PuRe
Supplementary Material (public)
There is no public supplementary material available
Citation

Fieraru, M., Khoreva, A., Pishchulin, L., & Schiele, B. (2018). Learning to Refine Human Pose Estimation. Retrieved from http://arxiv.org/abs/1804.07909.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0001-3C3D-9
Abstract
Multi-person pose estimation in images and videos is an important yet challenging task with many applications. Despite the large improvements in human pose estimation enabled by the development of convolutional neural networks, there still exist a lot of difficult cases where even the state-of-the-art models fail to correctly localize all body joints. This motivates the need for an additional refinement step that addresses these challenging cases and can be easily applied on top of any existing method. In this work, we introduce a pose refinement network (PoseRefiner) which takes as input both the image and a given pose estimate and learns to directly predict a refined pose by jointly reasoning about the input-output space. In order for the network to learn to refine incorrect body joint predictions, we employ a novel data augmentation scheme for training, where we model "hard" human pose cases. We evaluate our approach on four popular large-scale pose estimation benchmarks such as MPII Single- and Multi-Person Pose Estimation, PoseTrack Pose Estimation, and PoseTrack Pose Tracking, and report systematic improvement over the state of the art.