Extracting Quantitative Descriptions of Pedestrian Pre-crash Postures from Real-world Accident Videos

Martin Schachner*, Bernd Schneider, Wolfgang Sinz, Corina Klug

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference paperpeer-review

Abstract

Real-world accident videos represent a promising data source to investigate pedestrian pre-collision behaviour, significantly affecting in-crash kinematics. However, this data source presents challenges in quantifying behaviours and providing pose descriptions revealing joint locations and angles. This study investigated this issue and introduces a method for quantitative evaluation by extracting 3D poses from real-world accidents. The method combines common computer vision approaches and optimisation techniques to align a 3D human model to 2D pose information, extracted from the videos. The capabilities of the method were assessed by applying it to a dataset, holding measured ground truth data. To further demonstrate the method’scapabilities on real-world accident videos, a dataset was created from publicly available sources. Three videoswere selected from the dataset, showing typical pedestrian pre-collision reactions, such as raising arms or leaning back, before the introduced method was applied to reconstruct the 3D joint positions and angles for multiple video frames prior to impact. The results emphasise that accident videos can be used to obtain quantitative pedestrian postures and moving patterns, required to derive realistic boundary conditions for pedestrian simulations.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publication2020 IRCOBI Europe Conference
Place of PublicationMunich
PublisherInternational Research Council on the Biomechanics of Injury
Pages231-249
Number of pages19
ISBN (Print)2235-3151
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2020

Keywords

  • Accident video analysis
  • pedestrian pre-collision behaviour
  • , 3D posture reconstruction

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