Telescopic Vector Composition and Polar Accumulated Motion Residuals for Feature Extraction in Arabic Sign Language Recognition
Author(s) -
Tamer Shanableh,
Khaled Assaleh
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
eurasip journal on image and video processing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.341
H-Index - 40
eISSN - 1687-5281
pISSN - 1687-5176
DOI - 10.1155/2007/87929
Subject(s) - artificial intelligence , computer science , feature extraction , pattern recognition (psychology) , motion estimation , preprocessor , sign language , computer vision , feature (linguistics) , motion (physics) , linear discriminant analysis , feature vector , hidden markov model , philosophy , linguistics
This work introduces two novel approaches for feature extraction applied to video-based Arabic sign language recognition, namely, motion representation through motion estimation and motion representation through motion residuals. In the former, motion estimation is used to compute the motion vectors of a video-based deaf sign or gesture. In the preprocessing stage for feature extraction, the horizontal and vertical components of such vectors are rearranged into intensity images and transformed into the frequency domain. In the second approach, motion is represented through motion residuals. The residuals are then thresholded and transformed into the frequency domain. Since in both approaches the temporal dimension of the video-based gesture needs to be preserved, hidden Markov models are used for classification tasks. Additionally, this paper proposes to project the motion information in the time domain through either telescopic motion vector composition or polar accumulated differences of motion residuals. The feature vectors are then extracted from the projected motion information. After that, model parameters can be evaluated by using simple classifiers such as Fisher's linear discriminant. The paper reports on the classification accuracy of the proposed solutions. Comparisons with existing work reveal that up to 39% of the misclassifications have been corrected
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