ARCTIC: A Dataset for Dexterous Bimanual Hand-Object Manipulation ...
Humans intuitively understand that inanimate objects do not move by themselves, but that state changes are typically caused by human manipulation (e.g., the opening of a book). This is not yet the case for machines. In part this is because there exist no datasets with ground-truth 3D annotations for...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
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Format: | Report |
Language: | unknown |
Published: |
arXiv
2022
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2204.13662 https://arxiv.org/abs/2204.13662 |
Summary: | Humans intuitively understand that inanimate objects do not move by themselves, but that state changes are typically caused by human manipulation (e.g., the opening of a book). This is not yet the case for machines. In part this is because there exist no datasets with ground-truth 3D annotations for the study of physically consistent and synchronised motion of hands and articulated objects. To this end, we introduce ARCTIC -- a dataset of two hands that dexterously manipulate objects, containing 2.1M video frames paired with accurate 3D hand and object meshes and detailed, dynamic contact information. It contains bi-manual articulation of objects such as scissors or laptops, where hand poses and object states evolve jointly in time. We propose two novel articulated hand-object interaction tasks: (1) Consistent motion reconstruction: Given a monocular video, the goal is to reconstruct two hands and articulated objects in 3D, so that their motions are spatio-temporally consistent. (2) Interaction field ... : Project page: https://arctic.is.tue.mpg.de ... |
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