A Symbolic Representation of Human Posture for Interpretable Learning and Reasoning
Richard G. Freedman, Joseph B. Mueller, Jack Ladwig, Steven Johnston, David McDonald, Helen Wauck, Ruta Wheelock, Hayley Borck
- Year
- 2022
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Robots that interact with humans in a physical space or application need to think about the person's posture, which typically comes from visual sensors like cameras and infra-red. Artificial intelligence and machine learning algorithms use information from these sensors either directly or after some level of symbolic abstraction, and the latter usually partitions the range of observed values to discretize the continuous signal data. Although these representations have been effective in a variety of algorithms with respect to accuracy and task completion, the underlying models are rarely interpretable, which also makes their outputs more difficult to explain to people who request them. Instead of focusing on the possible sensor values that are familiar to a machine, we introduce a qualitative spatial reasoning approach that describes the human posture in terms that are more familiar to people. This paper explores the derivation of our symbolic representation at two levels of detail and its preliminary use as features for interpretable activity recognition.
Keywords
Related papers
A dual-loop framework for manufacturability-aware topology optimization of electric vehicle structures via wire arc additive manufacturing
Qiang Cui, Chuan Yu, Daoqian Yang +2 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Geometric digital twin: A digital and intelligent model for aero-engine assembly accuracy prediction
Ke Shang, Xin Jin, Teli Xu +4 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Revolutionizing Industries Through AI-Driven Robotics
Aryan Chaudhary
Recent Advances in Computer Science and Communications · 2026
Design and dynamic performance prediction of a novel large-aperture offset-feed deployable antenna
Chuang Shi, Tianming Liu, Ning Xue +6 more
Aerospace Science and Technology · 2026