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Benchmarks and Challenges in Pose Estimation for Egocentric Hand Interactions with Objects

The study analyzes the performance of various methods in the HANDS23 challenge for 3D hand-object reconstruction from egocentric views, highlighting the roles of addressing camera distortions, using high-capacity transformers, and view fusion, while also identifying challenging scenarios.

Year
2024
Venue
arXiv 2024
Authors
24
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arxiv.org/abs/2403.16428v2ARXIV-DEFAULT
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Abstract

We interact with the world with our hands and see it through our own (egocentric) perspective. A holistic 3Dunderstanding of such interactions from egocentric views is important for tasks in robotics, AR/VR, action recognition and motion generation. Accurately reconstructing such interactions in 3D is challenging due to heavy occlusion, viewpoint bias, camera distortion, and motion blur from the head movement. To this end, we designed the HANDS23 challenge based on the AssemblyHands and ARCTIC datasets with carefully designed training and testing splits. Based on the results of the top submitted methods and more recent baselines on the leaderboards, we perform a thorough analysis on 3D hand(-object) reconstruction tasks. Our analysis demonstrates the effectiveness of addressing distortion specific to egocentric cameras, adopting high-capacity transformers to learn complex hand-object interactions, and fusing predictions from different views. Our study further reveals challenging scenarios intractable with state-of-the-art methods, such as fast hand motion, object reconstruction from narrow egocentric views, and close contact between two hands and objects. Our efforts will enrich the community's knowledge foundation and facilitate future hand studies on egocentric hand-object interactions.

Authors

24