MORPHO

Capture and Analysis of Shapes in Motion


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Presentation

MORPHO is a new research project, granted from December 2010 to December 2014 by the French National Research Agency (ANR). It is aimed at designing new technologies for the measure and for the analysis of dynamic surface evolutions using visual data. Optical systems and digital cameras provide a simple and non invasive mean to observe shapes that evolve and deform and we propose to study the associated computing tools that allow for the combined analyses of shapes and motions. Typical examples include the estimation of mean shapes given a set of 3D models or the identification of abnormal deformations of a shape given its typical evolutions. Therefore this does not only include static shape models but also the way they deform with respect to typical motions. It brings a new research area on how motions relate to shapes where the relationships can be represented through various models that include traditional underlying structures, such as parametric shape models, but are not limited to them. The interest arises in several application domains where temporal surface deformations need to be captured and analyzed. It includes human body analyses but also extends to other deforming objects, sails for instance. Potential applications with human bodies are anyway numerous and important, from the identification of pathologies to the design of new prostheses. The project focus is therefore on human body shapes and their motions and on how to characterize them through new biometric models for analysis purposes.

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Contact

To contact us by e-mail, please see the members page.
You can reach the project leader by snail mail using this address:

Franck Hetroy
INRIA
Inovallée, 655 avenue de l'Europe
F-38334 Saint Ismier cedex
FRANCE

Copyright (c) 2010 MORPHO project. All rights reserved.