The contour tracking of a rugby ball : an application of particle filtering

M.Ing. === Object tracking in image sequences, in its general form, is very challenging. Due to the prohibitive complexity thereof, research has lead to the idea of tracking a template exposed to low-dimensional deformation such as translation, rotation and scaling. The inherent non-Gaussianity of t...

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Main Author: Janse van Rensburg, Tersia
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10210/4350
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uj-uj-19962017-09-16T04:01:56ZThe contour tracking of a rugby ball : an application of particle filteringJanse van Rensburg, TersiaElectric filtersAutomatic trackingImage processingMonte Carlo methodM.Ing.Object tracking in image sequences, in its general form, is very challenging. Due to the prohibitive complexity thereof, research has lead to the idea of tracking a template exposed to low-dimensional deformation such as translation, rotation and scaling. The inherent non-Gaussianity of the data acquired from general tracking problems renders the trusted Kalman filtering methodology futile. For this reason the idea of particle filtering was developed recently. Particle filters are sequential Monte Carlo methods based on multiple point mass (or "particle") representations of probability densities, which can be applied to any dynamical model and which generalize the traditional Kalman filtering methods. To date particle filtering has already been proved to be successful filtering method in different fields of science such as econometrics, signal processing, fluid mechanics, agriculture and aviation. In this dissertation, we discuss the problem of tracking a rugby ball in an image sequence as the ball is being passed to and fro. First, the problem of non-linear Bayesian tracking is focused upon, followed by a particular instance of particle filtering known as the condensation algorithm. Next, the problem of fitting an elliptical contour to the travelling rugby ball is dealt with in detail, after which the problem of tracking this evolving ellipse (representing the rugby ball's edge) over time along the image sequence by means of the condensation algorithm follows. Experimental results are presented and discussed and concluding remarks follow at the end.2012-02-06Thesisuj:1996http://hdl.handle.net/10210/4350
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Electric filters
Automatic tracking
Image processing
Monte Carlo method
spellingShingle Electric filters
Automatic tracking
Image processing
Monte Carlo method
Janse van Rensburg, Tersia
The contour tracking of a rugby ball : an application of particle filtering
description M.Ing. === Object tracking in image sequences, in its general form, is very challenging. Due to the prohibitive complexity thereof, research has lead to the idea of tracking a template exposed to low-dimensional deformation such as translation, rotation and scaling. The inherent non-Gaussianity of the data acquired from general tracking problems renders the trusted Kalman filtering methodology futile. For this reason the idea of particle filtering was developed recently. Particle filters are sequential Monte Carlo methods based on multiple point mass (or "particle") representations of probability densities, which can be applied to any dynamical model and which generalize the traditional Kalman filtering methods. To date particle filtering has already been proved to be successful filtering method in different fields of science such as econometrics, signal processing, fluid mechanics, agriculture and aviation. In this dissertation, we discuss the problem of tracking a rugby ball in an image sequence as the ball is being passed to and fro. First, the problem of non-linear Bayesian tracking is focused upon, followed by a particular instance of particle filtering known as the condensation algorithm. Next, the problem of fitting an elliptical contour to the travelling rugby ball is dealt with in detail, after which the problem of tracking this evolving ellipse (representing the rugby ball's edge) over time along the image sequence by means of the condensation algorithm follows. Experimental results are presented and discussed and concluding remarks follow at the end.
author Janse van Rensburg, Tersia
author_facet Janse van Rensburg, Tersia
author_sort Janse van Rensburg, Tersia
title The contour tracking of a rugby ball : an application of particle filtering
title_short The contour tracking of a rugby ball : an application of particle filtering
title_full The contour tracking of a rugby ball : an application of particle filtering
title_fullStr The contour tracking of a rugby ball : an application of particle filtering
title_full_unstemmed The contour tracking of a rugby ball : an application of particle filtering
title_sort contour tracking of a rugby ball : an application of particle filtering
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10210/4350
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