a General Framework for Combining Visual Trackers - the "Black Boxes" Approach

Ido Leichter, Michael Lindenbaum, and Ehud Rivlin.
A General Framework for Combining Visual Trackers - The "Black Boxes" Approach.
IJCV, 67(3):343-363, 2006

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Abstract

Over the past few years researchers have been invastigating the enhancement of visual tracking performance by devising trackers that simultaneously make use of several different features. In this paper we investigate the combination of synchronous visual trackers that use different features while treating the trackers as "black boxes". That is, instead of fusing the usage of the different types of data as has been performed in previous work, the combination here is allowed to use only the trackers' output estimates, which may be modified before their propagation to the next time step. We propose a probabilistic framework for combining multiple synchronous trackers, where each separate tracker outputs a probability density function of the tracked state, sequentially for each image. The trackers may output either an explicit probability density function, or a sample-set of it via CONDENSATION. Unlike previous tracker combinations, the proposed framework is fairly general and allows the combination of any set of trackers of this kind, even in different state-spaces of different dimansionality, under a few reasonable assumptions.The combination may consist of different trackers that track a common object, as well as trackers that track separate, albeit related objects, thus improving the tracking performance of each object. The benefits of merely using the final estimates of the separate trackers in the combination are twofold. Firstly, the framework for the combination is fairly general and may be easily used from the software aspects. Secondly, the combination may be performed in a distributed settings, where each separate tracker runs on a different site and uses different data, while avoiding the need to share the data. The suggested framework was successfully tested using various state-spaces and datasets, demonstrating that fusing the trackers' final distribution estimates may indeed be applicable.

Keywords

Co-authors

Bibtex Entry

@article{LeichterLR06a,
  title = {A General Framework for Combining Visual Trackers - The "Black Boxes" Approach},
  author = {Ido Leichter and Michael Lindenbaum and Ehud Rivlin},
  year = {2006},
  journal = {IJCV},
  volume = {67},
  number = {3},
  pages = {343-363},
  keywords = {Visual Tracking; Tracker Combination; Kalman Filter; Condensation},
  abstract = {Over the past few years researchers have been invastigating the enhancement of visual tracking performance by devising trackers that simultaneously make use of several different features. In this paper we investigate the combination of synchronous visual trackers that use different features while treating the trackers as "black boxes". That is, instead of fusing the usage of the different types of data as has been performed in previous work, the combination here is allowed to use only the trackers' output estimates, which may be modified before their propagation to the next time step. We propose a probabilistic framework for combining multiple synchronous trackers, where each separate tracker outputs a probability density function of the tracked state, sequentially for each image. The trackers may output either an explicit probability density function, or a sample-set of it via CONDENSATION. Unlike previous tracker combinations, the proposed framework is fairly general and allows the combination of any set of trackers of this kind, even in different state-spaces of different dimansionality, under a few reasonable assumptions.The combination may consist of different trackers that track a common object, as well as trackers that track separate, albeit related objects, thus improving the tracking performance of each object. The benefits of merely using the final estimates of the separate trackers in the combination are twofold. Firstly, the framework for the combination is fairly general and may be easily used from the software aspects. Secondly, the combination may be performed in a distributed settings, where each separate tracker runs on a different site and uses different data, while avoiding the need to share the data. The suggested framework was successfully tested using various state-spaces and datasets, demonstrating that fusing the trackers' final distribution estimates may indeed be applicable.}
}