Di-Hua Zhai

h-index26
2papers

2 Papers

CVDec 20, 2021Code
DMS-GCN: Dynamic Mutiscale Spatiotemporal Graph Convolutional Networks for Human Motion Prediction

Zigeng Yan, Di-Hua Zhai, Yuanqing Xia

Human motion prediction is an important and challenging task in many computer vision application domains. Recent work concentrates on utilizing the timing processing ability of recurrent neural networks (RNNs) to achieve smooth and reliable results in short-term prediction. However, as evidenced by previous work, RNNs suffer from errors accumulation, leading to unreliable results. In this paper, we propose a simple feed-forward deep neural network for motion prediction, which takes into account temporal smoothness and spatial dependencies between human body joints. We design a Multi-scale Spatio-temporal graph convolutional networks (GCNs) to implicitly establish the Spatio-temporal dependence in the process of human movement, where different scales fused dynamically during training. The entire model is suitable for all actions and follows a framework of encoder-decoder. The encoder consists of temporal GCNs to capture motion features between frames and semi-autonomous learned spatial GCNs to extract spatial structure among joint trajectories. The decoder uses temporal convolution networks (TCNs) to maintain its extensive ability. Extensive experiments show that our approach outperforms SOTA methods on the datasets of Human3.6M and CMU Mocap while only requiring much lesser parameters. Code will be available at https://github.com/yzg9353/DMSGCN.

CVAug 19, 2025
RCGNet: RGB-based Category-Level 6D Object Pose Estimation with Geometric Guidance

Sheng Yu, Di-Hua Zhai, Yuanqing Xia

While most current RGB-D-based category-level object pose estimation methods achieve strong performance, they face significant challenges in scenes lacking depth information. In this paper, we propose a novel category-level object pose estimation approach that relies solely on RGB images. This method enables accurate pose estimation in real-world scenarios without the need for depth data. Specifically, we design a transformer-based neural network for category-level object pose estimation, where the transformer is employed to predict and fuse the geometric features of the target object. To ensure that these predicted geometric features faithfully capture the object's geometry, we introduce a geometric feature-guided algorithm, which enhances the network's ability to effectively represent the object's geometric information. Finally, we utilize the RANSAC-PnP algorithm to compute the object's pose, addressing the challenges associated with variable object scales in pose estimation. Experimental results on benchmark datasets demonstrate that our approach is not only highly efficient but also achieves superior accuracy compared to previous RGB-based methods. These promising results offer a new perspective for advancing category-level object pose estimation using RGB images.