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Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail Breslav 1 , Nathan W. Fuller 2 , and Margrit Betke 1 ComputerScience
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Page 1: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild

1Boston University Department of Computer Science2Boston University Department of Biology

Mikhail Breslav1, Nathan W. Fuller2, and Margrit Betke1

ComputerScience

Page 2: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Motivation• Behavior• Aerial Vehicles

Page 3: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Past Work

• Study Kinematics (Hubel. 2012)

– Wind Tunnel– High Resolution Cameras

• 3D Tracking (Wu. 2009)

– Outdoor environment – Model Bats as Points

• Behavior and Trajectory Analysis (Theriault. 2010, Fisher. 2010)

Page 4: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Goal• Estimate Wing Beat Frequencies– Potential to improve tracking

TWing Beat Frequency: 1/T

Hubel et al. 2012

Page 5: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Challenging Data• Unpredictable Motions• Relatively Low Resolution• In FOV for a Short Time

Page 6: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Segmentation and Tracking• Foreground / Background Estimation• Kalman Filter

Page 7: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Shape-time Signals• Output of Tracker• Define “Shape”

Page 8: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Prototype Shapes

• Assumption– There are shapes that uniquely identify 3D

poses for a given camera

• Example

• Currently chosen manually

“up” “down” “neutral”

Page 9: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Main Idea• A prototype shape is equal to a 3D

pose• Repeating prototype shapes in a

shape-time signal

Estimate Wing Beat

Page 10: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Shape Comparison• Shape Distance– Shape Context Descriptor (Belongie et al. 2002)• Invariant to translation, scale, and optionally rotation

– Hungarian Algorithm• Establish Correspondences

• Estimate Wing Relative to Body with feature W

Page 11: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Shape Similarity Scores• Use Shape Distance and Ratio W to assign

similarity score– Also consider the ‘none’ hypothesis

‘None’

.24 .16 .43 .17

Page 12: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

“up” “down” “neutral”

Process Shape-Time Signal

• Find confident matches to prototype shapes

Page 13: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

“up”

Process Shape-Time Signal

“down”

“neutral”

Time Axis

Page 14: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Fast Fourier Transform

Time Axis

“up”

“down”

“neutral”

FFT

Page 15: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Fast Fourier Transform

Periodicity Estimate of 9.76 Hz

Page 16: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Experimental Results• 20 Bats • Both Automatic and Manual estimates

Page 17: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Discussion• Reasonable Estimates– Deviates from manual annotations by 1.3 Hz on

average, standard deviation 1.8 Hz– Falls within 10-15 Hz as reported in biology

literature (Foehring. 1984)

• Main Contribution– System for using shapes to estimate wing beat– First to do this for bats in the wild • Vision based system

Page 18: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Future work

• Choosing prototype shapes – Automatically and Intelligently

• Understand the mapping between 2D shapes and 3D poses for a given model– Generalize across datasets

• Try more robust shape comparison measures

Page 19: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Thank You for your Attention!

Page 20: Vision System for Wing Beat Analysis of Bats in the Wild 1 Boston University Department of Computer Science 2 Boston University Department of Biology Mikhail.

Questions?

Holding a bat!


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