7.7CVJun 4
LLM-Conditioned Synthesis of Pathological Gaits via Structured Gait-Language RepresentationsMritula Chandrasekaran, Sanket Kachole, Jarik Francik et al.
Pathological gait datasets remain scarce due to privacy, recruitment, cost, and movement variability. Our work presents a multimodal LLM-guided framework for pathology-aware 3D gait data synthesis from structured textual descriptions. The proposed method generates fixed-length synthetic skeleton-based gait sequences for pathological gait classification tasks. The framework combines motion tokenisation, pathology-aware language conditioning, LLM-based semantic augmentation, and language-to-gait generation. A key contribution is the proposed pathological tokeniser, which is designed to preserve pathology-specific motion characteristics during discrete representation learning. Experiments suggest that the proposed synthetic sequences improve downstream classification for recurrent classifiers when combined with real data. The best result is obtained using a GRU classifier trained with real and synthetic samples, achieving 92.77\% accuracy under a leave-one-subject-out protocol.
CVJul 16, 2023
Gait Data Augmentation using Physics-Based Biomechanical SimulationMritula Chandrasekaran, Jarek Francik, Dimitrios Makris
This paper focuses on addressing the problem of data scarcity for gait analysis. Standard augmentation methods may produce gait sequences that are not consistent with the biomechanical constraints of human walking. To address this issue, we propose a novel framework for gait data augmentation by using OpenSIM, a physics-based simulator, to synthesize biomechanically plausible walking sequences. The proposed approach is validated by augmenting the WBDS and CASIA-B datasets and then training gait-based classifiers for 3D gender gait classification and 2D gait person identification respectively. Experimental results indicate that our augmentation approach can improve the performance of model-based gait classifiers and deliver state-of-the-art results for gait-based person identification with an accuracy of up to 96.11% on the CASIA-B dataset.
2.0CVMar 15
PGcGAN: Pathological Gait-Conditioned GAN for Human Gait SynthesisMritula Chandrasekaran, Sanket Kachole, Jarek Francik et al.
Pathological gait analysis is constrained by limited and variable clinical datasets, which restrict the modeling of diverse gait impairments. To address this challenge, we propose a Pathological Gait-conditioned Generative Adversarial Network (PGcGAN) that synthesises pathology-specific gait sequences directly from observed 3D pose keypoint trajectories data. The framework incorporates one-hot encoded pathology labels within both the generator and discriminator, enabling controlled synthesis across six gait categories. The generator adopts a conditional autoencoder architecture trained with adversarial and reconstruction objectives to preserve structural and temporal gait characteristics. Experiments on the Pathological Gait Dataset demonstrate strong alignment between real and synthetic sequences through PCA and t-SNE analyses, visual kinematic inspection, and downstream classification tasks. Augmenting real data with synthetic sequences improved pathological gait recognition across GRU, LSTM, and CNN models, indicating that pathology-conditioned gait synthesis can effectively support data augmentation in pathological gait analysis.