hand gesture recognition
Our graph image features estrain Test distribution Gap Training distribution Invariant, Non-intuitiveness normalization Online Reference-joint difference vectors
Skeleton-based hand gesture recognition plays a crucial role in enabling intuitive human-computer interaction. Traditional methods have primarily relied on hand-crafted features--such as distances between joints or positional changes across frames--to alleviate issues from viewpoint variation or body proportion differences. However, these hand-crafted features often fail to capture the full spatio-temporal information in raw skeleton data, exhibit poor interpretability, and depend heavily on dataset-specific preprocessing, limiting generalization. In addition, normalization strategies in traditional methods, which rely on training data, can introduce domain gaps between training and testing environments, further hindering robustness in diverse real-world settings. To overcome these challenges, we exclude traditional hand-crafted features and propose Skeleton Kinematics Extraction Through Coordinated grapH (SKETCH), a novel framework that directly utilizes raw four-dimensional (time, x, y, and z) skeleton sequences and transforms them into intuitive visual graph representations.
A Comparative Study of EMG- and IMU-based Gesture Recognition at the Wrist and Forearm
Baghernezhad, Soroush, Mohammadreza, Elaheh, da Fonseca, Vinicius Prado, Zou, Ting, Jiang, Xianta
Gestures are an integral part of our daily interactions with the environment. Hand gesture recognition (HGR) is the process of interpreting human intent through various input modalities, such as visual data (images and videos) and bio-signals. Bio-signals are widely used in HGR due to their ability to be captured non-invasively via sensors placed on the arm. Among these, surface electromyography (sEMG), which measures the electrical activity of muscles, is the most extensively studied modality. However, less-explored alternatives such as inertial measurement units (IMUs) can provide complementary information on subtle muscle movements, which makes them valuable for gesture recognition. In this study, we investigate the potential of using IMU signals from different muscle groups to capture user intent. Our results demonstrate that IMU signals contain sufficient information to serve as the sole input sensor for static gesture recognition. Moreover, we compare different muscle groups and check the quality of pattern recognition on individual muscle groups. We further found that tendon-induced micro-movement captured by IMUs is a major contributor to static gesture recognition. We believe that leveraging muscle micro-movement information can enhance the usability of prosthetic arms for amputees. This approach also offers new possibilities for hand gesture recognition in fields such as robotics, teleoperation, sign language interpretation, and beyond.
ReactEMG: Stable, Low-Latency Intent Detection from sEMG via Masked Modeling
Wang, Runsheng, Zhu, Xinyue, Chen, Ava, Xu, Jingxi, Winterbottom, Lauren, Nilsen, Dawn M., Stein, Joel, Ciocarlie, Matei
Surface electromyography (sEMG) signals show promise for effective human-machine interfaces, particularly in rehabilitation and prosthetics. However, challenges remain in developing systems that respond quickly to user intent, produce stable flicker-free output suitable for device control, and work across different subjects without time-consuming calibration. In this work, we propose a framework for EMG-based intent detection that addresses these challenges. We cast intent detection as per-timestep segmentation of continuous sEMG streams, assigning labels as gestures unfold in real time. We introduce a masked modeling training strategy that aligns muscle activations with their corresponding user intents, enabling rapid onset detection and stable tracking of ongoing gestures. In evaluations against baseline methods, using metrics that capture accuracy, latency and stability for device control, our approach achieves state-of-the-art performance in zero-shot conditions. These results demonstrate its potential for wearable robotics and next-generation prosthetic systems. Our project website, video, code, and dataset are available at: https://reactemg.github.io/
Hand Gesture Recognition for Collaborative Robots Using Lightweight Deep Learning in Real-Time Robotic Systems
Muhtadin, null, Darmawan, I Wayan Agus, Rusydiansyah, Muhammad Hilmi, Purnama, I Ketut Eddy, Fatichah, Chastine, Purnomo, Mauridhi Hery
Direct and natural interaction is essential for intuitive human-robot collaboration, eliminating the need for additional devices such as joysticks, tablets, or wearable sensors. In this paper, we present a lightweight deep learning-based hand gesture recognition system that enables humans to control collaborative robots naturally and efficiently. This model recognizes eight distinct hand gestures with only 1,103 parameters and a compact size of 22 KB, achieving an accuracy of 93.5%. To further optimize the model for real-world deployment on edge devices, we applied quantization and pruning using TensorFlow Lite, reducing the final model size to just 7 KB. The system was successfully implemented and tested on a Universal Robot UR5 collaborative robot within a real-time robotic framework based on ROS2. The results demonstrate that even extremely lightweight models can deliver accurate and responsive hand gesture-based control for collaborative robots, opening new possibilities for natural human-robot interaction in constrained environments.
Learning Interpretable Rules from Neural Networks: Neurosymbolic AI for Radar Hand Gesture Recognition
Seifi, Sarah, Sukianto, Tobias, Carbonelli, Cecilia, Servadei, Lorenzo, Wille, Robert
Rule-based models offer interpretability but struggle with complex data, while deep neural networks excel in performance yet lack transparency. This work investigates a neuro-symbolic rule learning neural network named RL-Net that learns interpretable rule lists through neural optimization, applied for the first time to radar-based hand gesture recognition (HGR). We benchmark RL-Net against a fully transparent rule-based system (MIRA) and an explainable black-box model (XentricAI), evaluating accuracy, interpretability, and user adaptability via transfer learning. Our results show that RL-Net achieves a favorable trade-off, maintaining strong performance (93.03% F1) while significantly reducing rule complexity. We identify optimization challenges specific to rule pruning and hierarchy bias and propose stability-enhancing modifications. Compared to MIRA and XentricAI, RL-Net emerges as a practical middle ground between transparency and performance. This study highlights the real-world feasibility of neuro-symbolic models for interpretable HGR and offers insights for extending explainable AI to edge-deployable sensing systems.
DiG-Net: Enhancing Quality of Life through Hyper-Range Dynamic Gesture Recognition in Assistive Robotics
Beeri, Eran Bamani, Nissinman, Eden, Sintov, Avishai
Dynamic hand gestures play a pivotal role in assistive human-robot interaction (HRI), facilitating intuitive, non-verbal communication, particularly for individuals with mobility constraints or those operating robots remotely. Current gesture recognition methods are mostly limited to short-range interactions, reducing their utility in scenarios demanding robust assistive communication from afar. In this paper, we introduce a novel approach designed specifically for assistive robotics, enabling dynamic gesture recognition at extended distances of up to 30 meters, thereby significantly improving accessibility and quality of life. Our proposed Distance-aware Gesture Network (DiG-Net) effectively combines Depth-Conditioned Deformable Alignment (DADA) blocks with Spatio-Temporal Graph modules, enabling robust processing and classification of gesture sequences captured under challenging conditions, including significant physical attenuation, reduced resolution, and dynamic gesture variations commonly experienced in real-world assistive environments. We further introduce the Radiometric Spatio-Temporal Depth Attenuation Loss (RSTDAL), shown to enhance learning and strengthen model robustness across varying distances. Our model demonstrates significant performance improvement over state-of-the-art gesture recognition frameworks, achieving a recognition accuracy of 97.3% on a diverse dataset with challenging hyper-range gestures. Introduction The growing number of individuals living with disabilities and requiring assistance has created a pressing demand for assistive technologies that enhance users' independence, safety, and quality of life [1]. Among these, assistive robotic systems are increasingly integrated into environments where intuitive, nonverbal communication is essential for enabling natural interaction with individuals of varied abilities. Gesture-based interaction is particularly important in scenarios where speech is not an option. To contextualize our contribution, Table 1 presents a comparative overview of recent systems in this area, outlining their target users, sensing modalities, application domains, and level of human involvement. Our method is the only one to support dynamic gesture recognition at hyper-range distances, defined here as up to 30 meters, and to operate reliably in both indoor and outdoor environments, making it uniquely suited for real-world assistive deployment. Recent research has catalyzed a new generation of assistive systems capable of perceiving complex environments and interacting with humans in context-aware, natural ways [2, 3, 4].
UAV Control with Vision-based Hand Gesture Recognition over Edge-Computing
Abdalla, Sousannah, Baidya, Sabur
Gesture recognition presents a promising avenue for interfacing with unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) due to its intuitive nature and potential for precise interaction. This research conducts a comprehensive comparative analysis of vision-based hand gesture detection methodologies tailored for UAV Control. The existing gesture recognition approaches involving cropping, zooming, and color-based segmentation, do not work well for this kind of applications in dynamic conditions and suffer in performance with increasing distance and environmental noises. We propose to use a novel approach leveraging hand landmarks drawing and classification for gesture recognition based UAV control. With experimental results we show that our proposed method outperforms the other existing methods in terms of accuracy, noise resilience, and efficacy across varying distances, thus providing robust control decisions. However, implementing the deep learning based compute intensive gesture recognition algorithms on the UAV's onboard computer is significantly challenging in terms of performance. Hence, we propose to use a edge-computing based framework to offload the heavier computing tasks, thus achieving closed-loop real-time performance. With implementation over AirSim simulator as well as over a real-world UAV, we showcase the advantage of our end-to-end gesture recognition based UAV control system.
Time Frequency Analysis of EMG Signal for Gesture Recognition using Fine grained Features
Aarotale, Parshuram N., Rattani, Ajita
Electromyography (EMG) based hand gesture recognition converts forearm muscle activity into control commands for prosthetics, rehabilitation, and human computer interaction. This paper proposes a novel approach to EMG-based hand gesture recognition that uses fine-grained classification and presents XMANet, which unifies low-level local and high level semantic cues through cross layer mutual attention among shallow to deep CNN experts. Using stacked spectrograms and scalograms derived from the Short Time Fourier Transform (STFT) and Wavelet Transform (WT), we benchmark XMANet against ResNet50, DenseNet-121, MobileNetV3, and EfficientNetB0. Experimental results on the Grabmyo dataset indicate that, using STFT, the proposed XMANet model outperforms the baseline ResNet50, EfficientNetB0, MobileNetV3, and DenseNet121 models with improvement of approximately 1.72%, 4.38%, 5.10%, and 2.53%, respectively. When employing the WT approach, improvements of around 1.57%, 1.88%, 1.46%, and 2.05% are observed over the same baselines. Similarly, on the FORS EMG dataset, the XMANet(ResNet50) model using STFT shows an improvement of about 5.04% over the baseline ResNet50. In comparison, the XMANet(DenseNet121) and XMANet(MobileNetV3) models yield enhancements of approximately 4.11% and 2.81%, respectively. Moreover, when using WT, the proposed XMANet achieves gains of around 4.26%, 9.36%, 5.72%, and 6.09% over the baseline ResNet50, DenseNet121, MobileNetV3, and EfficientNetB0 models, respectively. These results confirm that XMANet consistently improves performance across various architectures and signal processing techniques, demonstrating the strong potential of fine grained features for accurate and robust EMG classification.
AutoMR: A Universal Time Series Motion Recognition Pipeline
Zhang, Likun, Yang, Sicheng, Wang, Zhuo, Liang, Haining, Shen, Junxiao
In this paper, we present an end-to-end automated motion recognition (AutoMR) pipeline designed for multimodal datasets. The proposed framework seamlessly integrates data preprocessing, model training, hyperparameter tuning, and evaluation, enabling robust performance across diverse scenarios. Our approach addresses two primary challenges: 1) variability in sensor data formats and parameters across datasets, which traditionally requires task-specific machine learning implementations, and 2) the complexity and time consumption of hyperparameter tuning for optimal model performance. Our library features an all-in-one solution incorporating QuartzNet as the core model, automated hyperparameter tuning, and comprehensive metrics tracking. Extensive experiments demonstrate its effectiveness on 10 diverse datasets, achieving state-of-the-art performance. This work lays a solid foundation for deploying motion-capture solutions across varied real-world applications.
Online hand gesture recognition using Continual Graph Transformers
Slama, Rim, Rabah, Wael, Wannous, Hazem
Online continuous action recognition has emerged as a critical research area due to its practical implications in real-world applications, such as human-computer interaction, healthcare, and robotics. Among various modalities, skeleton-based approaches have gained significant popularity, demonstrating their effectiveness in capturing 3D temporal data while ensuring robustness to environmental variations. However, most existing works focus on segment-based recognition, making them unsuitable for real-time, continuous recognition scenarios. In this paper, we propose a novel online recognition system designed for real-time skeleton sequence streaming. Our approach leverages a hybrid architecture combining Spatial Graph Convolutional Networks (S-GCN) for spatial feature extraction and a Transformer-based Graph Encoder (TGE) for capturing temporal dependencies across frames. Additionally, we introduce a continual learning mechanism to enhance model adaptability to evolving data distributions, ensuring robust recognition in dynamic environments. We evaluate our method on the SHREC'21 benchmark dataset, demonstrating its superior performance in online hand gesture recognition. Our approach not only achieves state-of-the-art accuracy but also significantly reduces false positive rates, making it a compelling solution for real-time applications. The proposed system can be seamlessly integrated into various domains, including human-robot collaboration and assistive technologies, where natural and intuitive interaction is crucial.