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Extending 3D body pose estimation for robotic-assistive therapies of autistic children

Abstract

Robotic-assistive therapy has demonstrated very encouraging results for children with Autism. Accurate estimation of the child's pose is essential both for human-robot interaction and for therapy assessment purposes. Non-intrusive methods are the sole viable option since these children are sensitive to touch. While depth cameras have been used extensively, existing methods face two major limitations: (i) they are usually trained with adult-only data and do not correctly estimate a child's pose, and (ii) they fail in scenarios with a high number of occlusions. Therefore, our goal was to develop a 3D pose estimator for children, by adapting an existing state-of-the-art 3D body modelling method and incorporating a linear regression model to fine-tune one of its inputs, thereby correcting the pose of children's 3D meshes. In controlled settings, our method has an error below 0.3m0.3m, which is considered acceptable for this kind of application and lower than current state-of-the-art methods. In real-world settings, the proposed model performs similarly to a Kinect depth camera and manages to successfully estimate the 3D body poses in a much higher number of frames.

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