|
Virtual Dictionary
Markerless Facial motion capture Markerless facial motion capture is the newer method of facial motion capture. It uses known facial features as its key points. The tips of the nostrils, the top of the nose, middle of the chin, middle and corners of the eyes, edges of the lips, ends of the eyebrows and so on. These features then become the marker points for the motion capture system, and it judges the whole face by tracking how these points move. Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases which may match this term.
Related Dictionary
Entries for Markerless Facial motion capture:
Resources
in our database matching the Term Markerless Facial motion capture:
Results by page [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] BBC article about how to add authenticity to VR, goes beyond graphics, also encompassing extensive use of motion capture to catalogue how stance, gait and the tiny movements of facial muscles combine when people display different emotions. Horses and other Animals in Motion is a collection of, as the title says, 45 sets of photographs of horses hauling, walking, trotting, etc., plus sequences of donkeys, an ox, pig, dog, cat, deer and other animals capture details of anatomy and movement. These images, were taken by the definitive expert in the field, Eadweard Muybridge. An expressive face is a work of art. Constantly moving and changing. Lips, brows, frown lines, each is in constant motion. Stop Staring analyses facial structures and movements, then shows animators how to bring life to the faces of their characters.
Promising work by QuinteQ on real-time motion capture without excessive hardware, holds promise for MoCap use in public VR.
MoCap - Motion Capture - for all its impressive abilities, has definite limitations in terms of sensory fidelity, the expense and bulk of the rig. Gesture control is cheap and captures every little movement, but easily overwhelmed. Is a hybrid system possible?Resource Type not Available
Motion sensors are starting to creep into a whole plethora of applications. They are the linch pins of haptics, of 3D pointers, of stress based sensor networks and locomotive VR interfaces. Yet, there's a problem. Small, discrete motion sensors, tiny enough to be built into larger devices the size say, of a Wii-remote or a 6 ounce HMD, are extremely difficult and expensive to produce.
The problem with photofit and sketch artists is, that human memory is not geared to remember fine facial features, even of people they know well. How then, to take advantage of facial recognition when looking for a suspect's identity?Resource Type not Available
Industry
News containing the Term Markerless Facial motion capture:
Results by page (06/09/2009)
A recent patent filing by defense contractor Lockheed Martin gives us a peek into a portable virtual reality simulator the company is cooking up. The patent application is titled: "Portable immersive environment using motio...
(20/11/2007)
(Press Release) The inertial motion capture suit Moven developed by Xsens Technologies B.V. has won the Overijssel Innovation Award 2007. The suit is based on Xsens' inertial sensor technology allowing total freedom of move...
(27/09/2004)
The CAPTECH2004 Workshop on Modelling and Motion Capture Techniques for Virtual Environments takes place on 9, 10 & 11 December 2004, in Zermat, Switzerland. An international workshop to stimulate discussion on the current an...
(02/04/2009)
(Press Release) Xsens Technologies, creator of Moven, a leading camera-less motion capture solution, has announced that Sony Picture Imageworks and independent console videogames developer Insomniac Games are new customers of the technology...
(19/09/2011)
Flashing a wink and a smirk might be second nature for some people, but computer animators can be hard-pressed to depict such an expression realistically. Now scientists at Disney Research, Pittsburgh, and Carnegie Mellon University's Robo...
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||