Design, Implementation, and Experimental Results of a Quaternion-Based Kalman Filter for Human Body Motion Tracking
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Authors
Yun, Xiaoping
Bachmann, Eric R.
Advisors
Second Readers
Subjects
Inertial sensors
Kalman filtering
magnetic sensors
motion measurement
orientation tracking
pose estimation
quaternions
virtual reality
Kalman filtering
magnetic sensors
motion measurement
orientation tracking
pose estimation
quaternions
virtual reality
Date of Issue
2006-12
Date
December 2006
Publisher
Language
Abstract
Real-time tracking of human body motion is an important
technology in synthetic environments, robotics, and other
human–computer interaction applications. This paper presents
an extended Kalman filter designed for real-time estimation of
the orientation of human limb segments. The filter processes data
from small inertial/magnetic sensor modules containing triaxial
angular rate sensors, accelerometers, and magnetometers. The
filter represents rotation using quaternions rather than Euler
angles or axis/angle pairs. Preprocessing of the acceleration and
magnetometer measurements using the Quest algorithm produces
a computed quaternion input for the filter. This preprocessing
reduces the dimension of the state vector and makes the measurement
equations linear. Real-time implementation and testing
results of the quaternion-based Kalman filter are presented.
Experimental results validate the filter design, and show the
feasibility of using inertial/magnetic sensor modules for real-time
human body motion tracking.
Type
Article
Description
This paper was presented in part
at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, Barcelona,
Spain, April 2005.
Series/Report No
Department
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Organization
Identifiers
NPS Report Number
Sponsors
This work was supported in part by the Army Research Office (ARO), and in part by the Navy Modeling and Simulation Management Office (NMSO).
Funding
Format
Citation
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ROBOTICS, VOL. 22, NO. 6, DECEMBER 2006
Distribution Statement
Rights
This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
