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The official implementation for ICMI 2020 Best Paper Award "Gesticulator: A framework for semantically-aware speech-driven gesture generation"

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Explanation video

This repository contains PyTorch based implementation of the ICMI 2020 Best Paper Award recipient paper Gesticulator: A framework for semantically-aware speech-driven gesture generation.

0. Set up

Requirements

  • python3.6+
  • ffmpeg (for visualization)

Installation

NOTE: during installation, there will be several error messages (one for bert-embedding and one for mxnet) about conflicting packages - please ignore them, they don't affect the functionality of the repository.

  • Clone the repository:

    git clone git@github.com:Svito-zar/gesticulator.git
    
  • (optional) Create and activate virtual environment:

    virtualenv gest_env --py=3.6.9
    source gest_env/bin/activate
    

    or

    conda create -n gest_env python=3.6.9
    conda activate gest_env
    
  • Install the dependencies:

    python install_script.py
    

Demonstration

Head over to the demo folder for a quick demonstration if you're not interested in training the model yourself.

Documentation

For all the scripts which we refer to in this repo description there are several command line arguments which you can see by calling them with the --help argument.

Loading and saving models

  • Pretrained model files can be loaded with the following command
    from gesticulator.model.model import GesticulatorModel
    
    loaded_model = GesticulatorModel.load_from_checkpoint(<PATH_TO_MODEL_FILE>)
    
  • If the --save_model_every_n_epochs argument is provided to train.py, then the model will be saved regularly during training.

Training the model

1. Obtain the data

  • Sign the license for the Trinity Speech-Gesture dataset
  • Obtain training data from the GENEA_Challenge_2020_data_release folder of the Trinity Speech-Gesture dataset, using the acquired credentials:
    cd dataset
    mkdir genea_data && cd genea_data
    
    # Change USERNAME to the actual username you received for the dataset
    wget --user USERNAME --ask-password -r -np -nH --cut-dirs=2 -R index.html* https://trinityspeechgesture.scss.tcd.ie/data/Trinity%20Speech-Gesture%20I/GENEA_Challenge_2020_data_release/ 
    

2.1 Rename and move files

# rename files from the GENEA Challenge names to the Trinity Speech-Gesture dataset naming
python rename_data_files.py

# Go back to the gesticulator/gesticulator directory
cd ..

2.2 Pre-process the data

cd gesticulator/data_processing

# encode motion from BVH files into exponensial map representation
python bvh2features.py
# ( this will take a while)

# Split the dataset into training and validation
python split_dataset.py

# Encode all the features
python process_dataset.py

# Go back to the gesticulator/gesticulator directory
cd ..

By default, the model expects the dataset in the dataset/raw_data folder, and the processed dataset will be available in the dataset/processed_data folder. If your dataset is elsewhere, please provide the correct paths with the --raw_data_dir and --proc_data_dir command line arguments.

3. Learn speech- and text-driven gesture generation model

In order to train the model, run

python train.py 

The model configuration and the training parameters are automatically read from the gesticulator/config/default_model_config.yaml file.

Notes

The results will be available in the results/last_run/ folder, where you will find the Tensorboard logs alongside with the trained model file.

It is possible to visualize the predicted motion on the validation data during training by setting the save_val_predictions_every_n_epoch parameter in the config file.

If the --run_name <name> command-line argument is provided, the results/<name> folder will be created and the results will be stored there. This can be very useful when you want to keep your logs and outputs for separate runs.

To train the model on the GPU, provide the --gpus argument as described here. For details regarding training parameters, please visit this link.


Evaluating the model

Visualizing the results

In order to generate and visualize gestures on the test dataset, run

python evaluate.py --use_semantic_input --use_random_input

If you set the run_name argument during training, then please provide the path to the saved model checkpoint by using the --model_file option.

The generated motion is stored in the results/<run_name>/generated_gestures folder 1) in the exponential map format 2) as .mp4 videos and 3) as 3D coordinates (which can be used for objective evaluation).

For nice visualization you can use the following repository: https://github.com/jonepatr/genea_visualizer

Quantitative evaluation

For the quantitative evaluation (velocity histograms and jerk), you may use the scripts in the gesticulator/obj_evaluation folder.

Citing

If you use this code in your research please cite it:

@inproceedings{kucherenko2020gesticulator,
  title={Gesticulator: A framework for semantically-aware speech-driven gesture generation},
  author={Kucherenko, Taras and Jonell, Patrik and van Waveren, Sanne and Henter, Gustav Eje and Alexanderson, Simon and Leite, Iolanda and Kjellstr{\"o}m, Hedvig},
  booktitle={Proceedings of the ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction},
  year={2020}
}

For using the dataset used in this work, please don't forget to cite Trinity Speech-Gesture dataset and GENEA Gesture Generation Challenge using the following bib files:

@inproceedings{ferstl2018investigating,
author = {Ferstl, Ylva and McDonnell, Rachel},
title = {Investigating the Use of Recurrent Motion Modelling for Speech Gesture Generation},
year = {2018},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 18th International Conference on Intelligent Virtual Agents},
series = {IVA '18}
}

@inproceedings{kucherenko2021large,
  author = {Kucherenko, Taras and Jonell, Patrik and Yoon, Youngwoo and Wolfert, Pieter and Henter, Gustav Eje},
  title = {A Large, Crowdsourced Evaluation of Gesture Generation Systems on Common Data: {T}he {GENEA} {C}hallenge 2020},
  year = {2021},
  publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
  address = {New York, NY, USA},
  doi = {10.1145/3397481.3450692},
  booktitle = {26th International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces},
  pages = {11--21},
  numpages = {11},
  keywords = {evaluation paradigms, conversational agents, gesture generation},
  location = {College Station, TX, USA},
  series = {IUI '21}
}

Contact

If you have any questions - please use the Discussion tab.

If you encounter any problems/bugs/issues please create an issue on Github.