gw-sd-2016 / Presenting101

Terrence Lewis Senior Design project
0 stars 0 forks source link

Week 22: Improvements to visual tracking #7

Open Tlewis10 opened 8 years ago

Tlewis10 commented 8 years ago

@twood02 @cctoombs. This week I made several modifications to the visual tracking component of my project. I added in and improved gesture tracking so that when a users hand moves out of "the box" horizontally I am now able to detect that as well as if it goes above the shoulder. I have also changed tolerances so that the box is more natural. I have added additional support for relational movements, so when a user moves to a position and stays there for a while it is not counted as pacing. I also fixed it so that when a user is standing in front of the Kinect, for pacing, it is based off of where they are when the program first starts rather than some predetermined spot. Next week I plan on creating a UI and making improvement to audio analysis.

twood02 commented 8 years ago

ok, let me know if you want to meet this week. Remember that you may want to adjust your program so that a speaker can stand in one place, move a few feet, then stand in that place for a while (ie., I wouldn't consider someone to be pacing unless they are actively moving around). You can probably achieve this pretty easily by resetting the "base" position every N seconds, say N=10.

Tlewis10 commented 8 years ago

I am sorry if I didn't make it clear enough in the in the description but that's exactly what I did even the 10 second part.

Very Respectfully, Terrence

On Sun, Jan 31, 2016 at 11:22 PM, Tim Wood notifications@github.com wrote:

ok, let me know if you want to meet this week. Remember that you may want to adjust your program so that a speaker can stand in one place, move a few feet, then stand in that place for a while (ie., I wouldn't consider someone to be pacing unless they are actively moving around). You can probably achieve this pretty easily by resetting the "base" position every N seconds, say N=10.

— Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub https://github.com/gw-sd-2016/Presenting101/issues/7#issuecomment-177755180 .

Terrence D. Lewis The George Washington University School of Engineering and Applied Science Bachelor of Science, Computer Science; Expected 2016 tlewis@gwmail.gwu.edu

twood02 commented 8 years ago

excellent!


Timothy Wood, Ph. D. Assistant Professor Department of Computer Science The George Washington University http://www.seas.gwu.edu/~timwood

On Sun, Jan 31, 2016 at 11:25 PM, Tlewis10 notifications@github.com wrote:

I am sorry if I didn't make it clear enough in the in the description but that's exactly what I did even the 10 second part.

Very Respectfully, Terrence

On Sun, Jan 31, 2016 at 11:22 PM, Tim Wood notifications@github.com wrote:

ok, let me know if you want to meet this week. Remember that you may want to adjust your program so that a speaker can stand in one place, move a few feet, then stand in that place for a while (ie., I wouldn't consider someone to be pacing unless they are actively moving around). You can probably achieve this pretty easily by resetting the "base" position every N seconds, say N=10.

— Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub < https://github.com/gw-sd-2016/Presenting101/issues/7#issuecomment-177755180

.

Terrence D. Lewis The George Washington University School of Engineering and Applied Science Bachelor of Science, Computer Science; Expected 2016 tlewis@gwmail.gwu.edu

— Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub https://github.com/gw-sd-2016/Presenting101/issues/7#issuecomment-177757169 .