Human gait is an important indicator of health, with applications ranging from diagnosis, monitoring, and rehabilitation. In practice, the use of gait analysis has been limited. Existing gait analysis systems are either expensive, intrusive, or require well-controlled environments such as a clinic or a laboratory. We present an accurate gait analysis system that is economical and non-intrusive. Our system is based on the Kinect sensor and thus can extract comprehensive gait information from all parts of the body. Beyond standard stride information, we also measure arm kinematics, demonstrating the wide range of parameters that can be extracted. We further improve over existing work by using information from the entire body to more accurately measure stride intervals. Our system requires no markers or battery-powered sensors, and instead relies on a single, inexpensive commodity 3D sensor with a large preexisting install base. We suggest that the proposed technique can be used for continuous gait tracking at home.
Many bitmap documents are composed by the superposition of layers with pictures and text. These documents do not compress well using image compression algorithms such as JPEG-2000, because text introduces sharp edges on top of the smooth surfaces typically found in natural images. Similarly, compression algorithms for text facsimiles, such as JBIG2, are not suited for color or gray level images. We propose the SLIm system for separating text and line drawing from background images, in order to compress both more effectively. This approach differ from previous ones such as DjVu, Tiff-FX, and MRC, by being extremely simple and fast, while yielding close to stateof-the-art compression performance. We present results that show that the SLIm compression performance is attractive for many applications.
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