Andrew Busch

2papers

2 Papers

41.2CVMar 20
NCSTR: Node-Centric Decoupled Spatio-Temporal Reasoning for Video-based Human Pose Estimation

Quang Dang Huynh, Xuefei Yin, Andrew Busch et al.

Video-based human pose estimation remains challenged by motion blur, occlusion, and complex spatiotemporal dynamics. Existing methods often rely on heatmaps or implicit spatio-temporal feature aggregation, which limits joint topology expressiveness and weakens cross-frame consistency. To address these problems, we propose a novel node-centric framework that explicitly integrates visual, temporal, and structural reasoning for accurate pose estimation. First, we design a visuo-temporal velocity-based joint embedding that fuses sub-pixel joint cues and inter-frame motion to build appearance- and motion-aware representations. Then, we introduce an attention-driven pose-query encoder, which applies attention over joint-wise heatmaps and frame-wise features to map the joint representations into a pose-aware node space, generating image-conditioned joint-aware node embeddings. Building upon these node embeddings, we propose a dual-branch decoupled spatio-temporal attention graph that models temporal propagation and spatial constraint reasoning in specialized local and global branches. Finally, a node-space expert fusion module is proposed to adaptively fuse the complementary outputs from both branches, integrating local and global cues for final joint predictions. Extensive experiments on three widely used video pose benchmarks demonstrate that our method outperforms state-of-the-art methods. The results highlight the value of explicit node-centric reasoning, offering a new perspective for advancing video-based human pose estimation.

46.4CVMay 9
Privacy-Aware Video Anomaly Detection through Orthogonal Subspace Projection

Lei Wang, Wenxiang Diao, Andrew Busch et al.

Video anomaly detection (VAD) systems often prioritize accuracy while overlooking privacy concerns, limiting their suitability for real-world deployment. We propose the Orthogonal Projection Layer (OPL), a lightweight module that removes task-irrelevant variations to produce representations focused on anomaly-relevant cues. To address privacy risks in human-centered scenarios, we introduce Guided OPL (G-OPL), which suppresses facial attributes using weak supervision from face-presence signals while preserving non-identifying features such as pose and motion. A cosine alignment objective enforces consistent capture and removal of facial information without identity labels or adversarial training. We further present a privacy-aware evaluation framework that jointly assesses detection performance and privacy preservation, and enables analysis of how sensitive information is filtered. Experiments show that embedding privacy constraints into model design reduces sensitive information while maintaining or improving detection accuracy, supporting projection-based architectures as a principled approach for privacy-aware VAD.