Researcher profile

Daniel Kienzle

Daniel Kienzle contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

TT4D: A Pipeline and Dataset for Table Tennis 4D Reconstruction From Monocular Videos

We present TT4D, a large-scale, high-fidelity table tennis dataset. It provides $140+$ hours of reconstructed singles and doubles gameplay from monocular broadcast videos, featuring multimodal annotations like high-quality camera calibrations, precise 3D ball positions, ball spin, time segmentation, and 3D human meshes over time. This rich data provides a new foundation for virtual replay, in-depth player analysis, and robot learning. The dataset's combination of scale and precision is achieved through a novel reconstruction pipeline. Prior methods first partition a game sequence into individual shot segments based on the 2D ball track, and only then attempt reconstruction. However, 2D-based time segmentation collapses under occlusion and varied camera viewpoints, preventing reliable reconstruction. We invert this paradigm by first lifting the entire unsegmented 2D ball track to 3D through a learned lifting network. This 3D trajectory then allows us to reliably perform time segmentation. The learned lifting network also infers the ball's spin, handles unreliable ball detections, and successfully reconstructs the ball trajectory in cases of high occlusion. This lift-first design is necessary, as our pipeline is the only method capable of reconstructing table tennis gameplay from general-view broadcast monocular videos. We demonstrate the dataset's fidelity through two downstream tasks: estimating the racket's pose \& velocity at impact, and training a generative model of competitive rallies.

preprint2022arXiv

COVID Detection and Severity Prediction with 3D-ConvNeXt and Custom Pretrainings

Since COVID strongly affects the respiratory system, lung CT-scans can be used for the analysis of a patients health. We introduce a neural network for the prediction of the severity of lung damage and the detection of a COVID-infection using three-dimensional CT-data. Therefore, we adapt the recent ConvNeXt model to process three-dimensional data. Furthermore, we design and analyze different pretraining methods specifically designed to improve the models ability to handle three-dimensional CT-data. We rank 2nd in the 1st COVID19 Severity Detection Challenge and 3rd in the 2nd COVID19 Detection Challenge.

preprint2022arXiv

Recognition of Freely Selected Keypoints on Human Limbs

Nearly all Human Pose Estimation (HPE) datasets consist of a fixed set of keypoints. Standard HPE models trained on such datasets can only detect these keypoints. If more points are desired, they have to be manually annotated and the model needs to be retrained. Our approach leverages the Vision Transformer architecture to extend the capability of the model to detect arbitrary keypoints on the limbs of persons. We propose two different approaches to encode the desired keypoints. (1) Each keypoint is defined by its position along the line between the two enclosing keypoints from the fixed set and its relative distance between this line and the edge of the limb. (2) Keypoints are defined as coordinates on a norm pose. Both approaches are based on the TokenPose architecture, while the keypoint tokens that correspond to the fixed keypoints are replaced with our novel module. Experiments show that our approaches achieve similar results to TokenPose on the fixed keypoints and are capable of detecting arbitrary keypoints on the limbs.