Xue, Hongfei
BioPose: Biomechanically-accurate 3D Pose Estimation from Monocular Videos
Koleini, Farnoosh, Saleem, Muhammad Usama, Wang, Pu, Xue, Hongfei, Helmy, Ahmed, Fenwick, Abbey
Recent advancements in 3D human pose estimation from single-camera images and videos have relied on parametric models, like SMPL. However, these models oversimplify anatomical structures, limiting their accuracy in capturing true joint locations and movements, which reduces their applicability in biomechanics, healthcare, and robotics. Biomechanically accurate pose estimation, on the other hand, typically requires costly marker-based motion capture systems and optimization techniques in specialized labs. To bridge this gap, we propose BioPose, a novel learning-based framework for predicting biomechanically accurate 3D human pose directly from monocular videos. BioPose includes three key components: a Multi-Query Human Mesh Recovery model (MQ-HMR), a Neural Inverse Kinematics (NeurIK) model, and a 2D-informed pose refinement technique. MQ-HMR leverages a multi-query deformable transformer to extract multi-scale fine-grained image features, enabling precise human mesh recovery. NeurIK treats the mesh vertices as virtual markers, applying a spatial-temporal network to regress biomechanically accurate 3D poses under anatomical constraints. To further improve 3D pose estimations, a 2D-informed refinement step optimizes the query tokens during inference by aligning the 3D structure with 2D pose observations. Experiments on benchmark datasets demonstrate that BioPose significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods. Project website: \url{https://m-usamasaleem.github.io/publication/BioPose/BioPose.html}.
GenHMR: Generative Human Mesh Recovery
Saleem, Muhammad Usama, Pinyoanuntapong, Ekkasit, Wang, Pu, Xue, Hongfei, Das, Srijan, Chen, Chen
Human mesh recovery (HMR) is crucial in many computer vision applications; from health to arts and entertainment. HMR from monocular images has predominantly been addressed by deterministic methods that output a single prediction for a given 2D image. However, HMR from a single image is an ill-posed problem due to depth ambiguity and occlusions. Probabilistic methods have attempted to address this by generating and fusing multiple plausible 3D reconstructions, but their performance has often lagged behind deterministic approaches. In this paper, we introduce GenHMR, a novel generative framework that reformulates monocular HMR as an image-conditioned generative task, explicitly modeling and mitigating uncertainties in the 2D-to-3D mapping process. GenHMR comprises two key components: (1) a pose tokenizer to convert 3D human poses into a sequence of discrete tokens in a latent space, and (2) an image-conditional masked transformer to learn the probabilistic distributions of the pose tokens, conditioned on the input image prompt along with randomly masked token sequence. During inference, the model samples from the learned conditional distribution to iteratively decode high-confidence pose tokens, thereby reducing 3D reconstruction uncertainties. To further refine the reconstruction, a 2D pose-guided refinement technique is proposed to directly fine-tune the decoded pose tokens in the latent space, which forces the projected 3D body mesh to align with the 2D pose clues. Experiments on benchmark datasets demonstrate that GenHMR significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods. Project website can be found at https://m-usamasaleem.github.io/publication/GenHMR/GenHMR.html
MMHMR: Generative Masked Modeling for Hand Mesh Recovery
Saleem, Muhammad Usama, Pinyoanuntapong, Ekkasit, Patel, Mayur Jagdishbhai, Xue, Hongfei, Helmy, Ahmed, Das, Srijan, Wang, Pu
Reconstructing a 3D hand mesh from a single RGB image is challenging due to complex articulations, self-occlusions, and depth ambiguities. Traditional discriminative methods, which learn a deterministic mapping from a 2D image to a single 3D mesh, often struggle with the inherent ambiguities in 2D-to-3D mapping. To address this challenge, we propose MMHMR, a novel generative masked model for hand mesh recovery that synthesizes plausible 3D hand meshes by learning and sampling from the probabilistic distribution of the ambiguous 2D-to-3D mapping process. MMHMR consists of two key components: (1) a VQ-MANO, which encodes 3D hand articulations as discrete pose tokens in a latent space, and (2) a Context-Guided Masked Transformer that randomly masks out pose tokens and learns their joint distribution, conditioned on corrupted token sequences, image context, and 2D pose cues. This learned distribution facilitates confidence-guided sampling during inference, producing mesh reconstructions with low uncertainty and high precision. Extensive evaluations on benchmark and real-world datasets demonstrate that MMHMR achieves state-of-the-art accuracy, robustness, and realism in 3D hand mesh reconstruction. Project website: https://m-usamasaleem.github.io/publication/MMHMR/mmhmr.html
AS-70: A Mandarin stuttered speech dataset for automatic speech recognition and stuttering event detection
Gong, Rong, Xue, Hongfei, Wang, Lezhi, Xu, Xin, Li, Qisheng, Xie, Lei, Bu, Hui, Wu, Shaomei, Zhou, Jiaming, Qin, Yong, Zhang, Binbin, Du, Jun, Bin, Jia, Li, Ming
The rapid advancements in speech technologies over the past two decades have led to human-level performance in tasks like automatic speech recognition (ASR) for fluent speech. However, the efficacy of these models diminishes when applied to atypical speech, such as stuttering. This paper introduces AS-70, the first publicly available Mandarin stuttered speech dataset, which stands out as the largest dataset in its category. Encompassing conversational and voice command reading speech, AS-70 includes verbatim manual transcription, rendering it suitable for various speech-related tasks. Furthermore, baseline systems are established, and experimental results are presented for ASR and stuttering event detection (SED) tasks. By incorporating this dataset into the model fine-tuning, significant improvements in the state-of-the-art ASR models, e.g., Whisper and Hubert, are observed, enhancing their inclusivity in addressing stuttered speech.
Unveiling the Potential of LLM-Based ASR on Chinese Open-Source Datasets
Geng, Xuelong, Xu, Tianyi, Wei, Kun, Mu, Bingshen, Xue, Hongfei, Wang, He, Li, Yangze, Guo, Pengcheng, Dai, Yuhang, Li, Longhao, Shao, Mingchen, Xie, Lei
Large Language Models (LLMs) have demonstrated unparalleled effectiveness in various NLP tasks, and integrating LLMs with automatic speech recognition (ASR) is becoming a mainstream paradigm. Building upon this momentum, our research delves into an in-depth examination of this paradigm on a large open-source Chinese dataset. Specifically, our research aims to evaluate the impact of various configurations of speech encoders, LLMs, and projector modules in the context of the speech foundation encoder-LLM ASR paradigm. Furthermore, we introduce a three-stage training approach, expressly developed to enhance the model's ability to align auditory and textual information. The implementation of this approach, alongside the strategic integration of ASR components, enabled us to achieve the SOTA performance on the AISHELL-1, Test_Net, and Test_Meeting test sets. Our analysis presents an empirical foundation for future research in LLM-based ASR systems and offers insights into optimizing performance using Chinese datasets. We will publicly release all scripts used for data preparation, training, inference, and scoring, as well as pre-trained models and training logs to promote reproducible research.
SSHR: Leveraging Self-supervised Hierarchical Representations for Multilingual Automatic Speech Recognition
Xue, Hongfei, Shao, Qijie, Huang, Kaixun, Chen, Peikun, Xie, Lei, Liu, Jie
Multilingual automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems have garnered attention for their potential to extend language coverage globally. While self-supervised learning (SSL) has demonstrated its effectiveness in multilingual ASR, it is worth noting that the various layers' representations of SSL potentially contain distinct information that has not been fully leveraged. In this study, we propose a novel method that leverages self-supervised hierarchical representations (SSHR) to fine-tune multilingual ASR. We first analyze the different layers of the SSL model for language-related and content-related information, uncovering layers that show a stronger correlation. Then, we extract a language-related frame from correlated middle layers and guide specific content extraction through self-attention mechanisms. Additionally, we steer the model toward acquiring more content-related information in the final layers using our proposed Cross-CTC. We evaluate SSHR on two multilingual datasets, Common Voice and ML-SUPERB, and the experimental results demonstrate that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance to the best of our knowledge.