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Collaborating Authors

 Ye, Yuting


CHOICE: Coordinated Human-Object Interaction in Cluttered Environments for Pick-and-Place Actions

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Animating human-scene interactions such as pick-and-place tasks in cluttered, complex layouts is a challenging task, with objects of a wide variation of geometries and articulation under scenarios with various obstacles. The main difficulty lies in the sparsity of the motion data compared to the wide variation of the objects and environments as well as the poor availability of transition motions between different tasks, increasing the complexity of the generalization to arbitrary conditions. To cope with this issue, we develop a system that tackles the interaction synthesis problem as a hierarchical goal-driven task. Firstly, we develop a bimanual scheduler that plans a set of keyframes for simultaneously controlling the two hands to efficiently achieve the pick-and-place task from an abstract goal signal such as the target object selected by the user. Next, we develop a neural implicit planner that generates guidance hand trajectories under diverse object shape/types and obstacle layouts. Finally, we propose a linear dynamic model for our DeepPhase controller that incorporates a Kalman filter to enable smooth transitions in the frequency domain, resulting in a more realistic and effective multi-objective control of the character.Our system can produce a wide range of natural pick-and-place movements with respect to the geometry of objects, the articulation of containers and the layout of the objects in the scene.


DivaTrack: Diverse Bodies and Motions from Acceleration-Enhanced Three-Point Trackers

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Full-body avatar presence is crucial for immersive social and environmental interactions in digital reality. However, current devices only provide three six degrees of freedom (DOF) poses from the headset and two controllers (i.e. three-point trackers). Because it is a highly under-constrained problem, inferring full-body pose from these inputs is challenging, especially when supporting the full range of body proportions and use cases represented by the general population. In this paper, we propose a deep learning framework, DivaTrack, which outperforms existing methods when applied to diverse body sizes and activities. We augment the sparse three-point inputs with linear accelerations from Inertial Measurement Units (IMU) to improve foot contact prediction. We then condition the otherwise ambiguous lower-body pose with the predictions of foot contact and upper-body pose in a two-stage model. We further stabilize the inferred full-body pose in a wide range of configurations by learning to blend predictions that are computed in two reference frames, each of which is designed for different types of motions. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our design on a large dataset that captures 22 subjects performing challenging locomotion for three-point tracking, including lunges, hula-hooping, and sitting. As shown in a live demo using the Meta VR headset and Xsens IMUs, our method runs in real-time while accurately tracking a user's motion when they perform a diverse set of movements.


MOCHA: Real-Time Motion Characterization via Context Matching

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Transforming neutral, characterless input motions to embody the distinct style of a notable character in real time is highly compelling for character animation. This paper introduces MOCHA, a novel online motion characterization framework that transfers both motion styles and body proportions from a target character to an input source motion. MOCHA begins by encoding the input motion into a motion feature that structures the body part topology and captures motion dependencies for effective characterization. Central to our framework is the Neural Context Matcher, which generates a motion feature for the target character with the most similar context to the input motion feature. The conditioned autoregressive model of the Neural Context Matcher can produce temporally coherent character features in each time frame. To generate the final characterized pose, our Characterizer network incorporates the characteristic aspects of the target motion feature into the input motion feature while preserving its context. This is achieved through a transformer model that introduces the adaptive instance normalization and context mapping-based cross-attention, effectively injecting the character feature into the source feature. We validate the performance of our framework through comparisons with prior work and an ablation study. Our framework can easily accommodate various applications, including characterization with only sparse input and real-time characterization. Additionally, we contribute a high-quality motion dataset comprising six different characters performing a range of motions, which can serve as a valuable resource for future research.


QuestEnvSim: Environment-Aware Simulated Motion Tracking from Sparse Sensors

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Replicating a user's pose from only wearable sensors is important for many AR/VR applications. Most existing methods for motion tracking avoid environment interaction apart from foot-floor contact due to their complex dynamics and hard constraints. However, in daily life people regularly interact with their environment, e.g. by sitting on a couch or leaning on a desk. Using Reinforcement Learning, we show that headset and controller pose, if combined with physics simulation and environment observations can generate realistic full-body poses even in highly constrained environments. The physics simulation automatically enforces the various constraints necessary for realistic poses, instead of manually specifying them as in many kinematic approaches. These hard constraints allow us to achieve high-quality interaction motions without typical artifacts such as penetration or contact sliding. We discuss three features, the environment representation, the contact reward and scene randomization, crucial to the performance of the method. We demonstrate the generality of the approach through various examples, such as sitting on chairs, a couch and boxes, stepping over boxes, rocking a chair and turning an office chair. We believe these are some of the highest-quality results achieved for motion tracking from sparse sensor with scene interaction.


Simulation and Retargeting of Complex Multi-Character Interactions

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

We present a method for reproducing complex multi-character interactions for physically simulated humanoid characters using deep reinforcement learning. Our method learns control policies for characters that imitate not only individual motions, but also the interactions between characters, while maintaining balance and matching the complexity of reference data. Our approach uses a novel reward formulation based on an interaction graph that measures distances between pairs of interaction landmarks. This reward encourages control policies to efficiently imitate the character's motion while preserving the spatial relationships of the interactions in the reference motion. We evaluate our method on a variety of activities, from simple interactions such as a high-five greeting to more complex interactions such as gymnastic exercises, Salsa dancing, and box carrying and throwing. This approach can be used to ``clean-up'' existing motion capture data to produce physically plausible interactions or to retarget motion to new characters with different sizes, kinematics or morphologies while maintaining the interactions in the original data.


Learning to Transfer In-Hand Manipulations Using a Greedy Shape Curriculum

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In-hand object manipulation is challenging to simulate due to complex contact dynamics, non-repetitive finger gaits, and the need to indirectly control unactuated objects. Further adapting a successful manipulation skill to new objects with different shapes and physical properties is a similarly challenging problem. In this work, we show that natural and robust in-hand manipulation of simple objects in a dynamic simulation can be learned from a high quality motion capture example via deep reinforcement learning with careful designs of the imitation learning problem. We apply our approach on both single-handed and two-handed dexterous manipulations of diverse object shapes and motions. We then demonstrate further adaptation of the example motion to a more complex shape through curriculum learning on intermediate shapes morphed between the source and target object. While a naive curriculum of progressive morphs often falls short, we propose a simple greedy curriculum search algorithm that can successfully apply to a range of objects such as a teapot, bunny, bottle, train, and elephant.


Bayes EMbedding (BEM): Refining Representation by Integrating Knowledge Graphs and Behavior-specific Networks

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Low-dimensional embeddings of knowledge graphs and behavior graphs have proved remarkably powerful in varieties of tasks, from predicting unobserved edges between entities to content recommendation. The two types of graphs can contain distinct and complementary information for the same entities/nodes. However, previous works focus either on knowledge graph embedding or behavior graph embedding while few works consider both in a unified way. Here we present BEM , a Bayesian framework that incorporates the information from knowledge graphs and behavior graphs. To be more specific, BEM takes as prior the pre-trained embeddings from the knowledge graph, and integrates them with the pre-trained embeddings from the behavior graphs via a Bayesian generative model. BEM is able to mutually refine the embeddings from both sides while preserving their own topological structures. To show the superiority of our method, we conduct a range of experiments on three benchmark datasets: node classification, link prediction, triplet classification on two small datasets related to Freebase, and item recommendation on a large-scale e-commerce dataset.


Disentangling Pose from Appearance in Monochrome Hand Images

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Hand pose estimation from the monocular 2D image is challenging due to the variation in lighting, appearance, and background. While some success has been achieved using deep neural networks, they typically require collecting a large dataset that adequately samples all the axes of variation of hand images. It would, therefore, be useful to find a representation of hand pose which is independent of the image appearance~(like hand texture, lighting, background), so that we can synthesize unseen images by mixing pose-appearance combinations. In this paper, we present a novel technique that disentangles the representation of pose from a complementary appearance factor in 2D monochrome images. We supervise this disentanglement process using a network that learns to generate images of hand using specified pose+appearance features. Unlike previous work, we do not require image pairs with a matching pose; instead, we use the pose annotations already available and introduce a novel use of cycle consistency to ensure orthogonality between the factors. Experimental results show that our self-disentanglement scheme successfully decomposes the hand image into the pose and its complementary appearance features of comparable quality as the method using paired data. Additionally, training the model with extra synthesized images with unseen hand-appearance combinations by re-mixing pose and appearance factors from different images can improve the 2D pose estimation performance.


HierLPR: Decision making in hierarchical multi-label classification with local precision rates

arXiv.org Machine Learning

In this article we propose a novel ranking algorithm, referred to as HierLPR, for the multi-label classification problem when the candidate labels follow a known hierarchical structure. HierLPR is motivated by a new metric called eAUC that we design to assess the ranking of classification decisions. This metric, associated with the hit curve and local precision rate, emphasizes the accuracy of the first calls. We show that HierLPR optimizes eAUC under the tree constraint and some light assumptions on the dependency between the nodes in the hierarchy. We also provide a strategy to make calls for each node based on the ordering produced by HierLPR, with the intent of controlling FDR or maximizing F-score. The performance of our proposed methods is demonstrated on synthetic datasets as well as a real example of disease diagnosis using NCBI GEO datasets. In these cases, HierLPR shows a favorable result over competing methods in the early part of the precision-recall curve.