Kinect v2 Tips, Tricks and Examples

teaching4After answering so many different questions about how to use various parts and components of the “Kinect v2 with MS-SDK”-package, I think it would be easier, if I share some general tips, tricks and examples. I’m going to add more tips and tricks to this article in time. Feel free to drop by, from time to time, to check out what’s new.

And here is a link to the Online documentation of the K2-asset.

Table of Contents:

What is the purpose of all manages in the KinectScripts-folder
How to use the Kinect v2-Package functionality in your own Unity project
How to use your own model with the AvatarController
How to make the avatar hands twist around the bone
How to utilize Kinect to interact with GUI buttons and components
How to get the depth- or color-camera textures
How to get the position of a body joint
How to make a game object rotate as the user
How to make a game object follow user’s head position and rotation
How to get the face-points’ coordinates
How to mix Kinect-captured movement with Mecanim animation
How to add your models to the FittingRoom-demo
How to set up the sensor height and angle
Are there any events, when a user is detected or lost
How to process discrete gestures like swipes and poses like hand-raises
How to process continuous gestures, like ZoomIn, ZoomOut and Wheel
How to utilize visual (VGB) gestures in the K2-asset
How to change the language or grammar for speech recognition
How to run the fitting-room or overlay demo in portrait mode
How to build an exe from ‘Kinect-v2 with MS-SDK’ project
How to make the Kinect-v2 package work with Kinect-v1
What do the options of ‘Compute user map’-setting mean
How to set up the user detection order
How to enable body-blending in the FittingRoom-demo, or disable it to increase FPS
How to build Windows-Store (UWP-8.1) application
How to work with multiple users
How to use the FacetrackingManager
How to add background image to the FittingRoom-demo
How to move the FPS-avatars of positionally tracked users in VR environment
How to create your own gestures
How to enable or disable the tracking of inferred joints
How to build exe with the Kinect-v2 plugins provided by Microsoft
How to build Windows-Store (UWP-10) application
How to run the projector-demo scene
How to render background and the background-removal image on the scene background
How to run the demo scenes on non-Windows platforms
How to workaround the user tracking issue, when the user is turned back
How to get the full scene depth image as texture
Some useful hints regarding AvatarController and AvatarScaler
How to setup the K2-package to work with Orbbec Astra sensors (deprecated)
How to setup the K2-asset to work with Nuitrack body tracking SDK
How to control Keijiro’s Skinner-avatars with the Avatar-Controller component
How to track a ball hitting a wall (hints)
How to create your own programmatic gestures
What is the file-format used by the KinectRecorderPlayer-component (KinectRecorderDemo)
How to enable user gender and age detection in KinectFittingRoom1-demo scene

What is the purpose of all manages in the KinectScripts-folder:

The managers in the KinectScripts-folder are components. You can utilize them in your projects, depending on the features you need. The KinectManager is the most general component, needed to interact with the sensor and to get basic data from it, like the color and depth streams, and the bodies and joints’ positions in meters, in Kinect space. The purpose of the AvatarController is to transfer the detected joint positions and orientations to a rigged skeleton. The CubemanController is similar, but it works with transforms and lines to represent the joints and bones, in order to make locating the tracking issues easier. The FacetrackingManager deals with the face points and head/neck orientation. It is used internally by the KinectManager (if available at the same time) to get the precise position and orientation of the head and neck. The InteractionManager is used to control the hand cursor and to detect hand grips, releases and clicks. And finally, the SpeechManager is used for recognition of speech commands. Pay also attention to the Samples-folder. It contains several simple examples (some of them cited below) you can learn from, use directly or copy parts of the code into your scripts.

How to use the Kinect v2-Package functionality in your own Unity project:

1. Copy folder ‘KinectScripts’ from the Assets/K2Examples-folder of the package to your project. This folder contains the package scripts, filters and interfaces.
2. Copy folder ‘Resources’ from the Assets/K2Examples-folder of the package to your project. This folder contains all needed libraries and resources. You can skip copying the libraries you don’t plan to use, in order to save space.
3. Copy folder ‘Standard Assets’ from the Assets/K2Examples-folder of the package to your project. It contains the wrapper classes for Kinect-v2 SDK.
4. Wait until Unity detects and compiles the newly copied resources, folders and scripts.
See this tip as well, if you like to build your project with the Kinect-v2 plugins provided by Microsoft.

How to use your own model with the AvatarController:

1. (Optional) Make sure your model is in T-pose. This is the zero-pose of Kinect joint orientations.
2. Select the model-asset in Assets-folder. Select the Rig-tab in Inspector window.
3. Set the AnimationType to ‘Humanoid’ and AvatarDefinition – to ‘Create from this model’.
4. Press the Apply-button. Then press the Configure-button to make sure the joints are correctly assigned. After that exit the configuration window.
5. Put the model into the scene.
6. Add the KinectScript/AvatarController-script as component to the model’s game object in the scene.
7. Make sure your model also has Animator-component, it is enabled and its Avatar-setting is set correctly.
8. Enable or disable (as needed) the MirroredMovement and VerticalMovement-settings of the AvatarController-component. Do mind when mirrored movement is enabled, the model’s transform should have Y-rotation of 180 degrees.
9. Run the scene to test the avatar model. If needed, tweak some settings of AvatarController and try again.

How to make the avatar hands twist around the bone:

To do it, you need to set ‘Allowed Hand Rotations’-setting of the KinectManager to ‘All’. KinectManager is a component of the MainCamera in the example scenes. This setting has three options: None – turns off all hand rotations, Default – turns on the hand rotations, except the twists around the bone, All – turns on all hand rotations.

How to utilize Kinect to interact with GUI buttons and components:

1. Add the InteractionManager to the main camera or to other persistent object in the scene. It is used to control the hand cursor and to detect hand grips, releases and clicks. Grip means closed hand with thumb over the other fingers, Release – opened hand, hand Click is generated when the user’s hand doesn’t move (stays still) for about 2 seconds.
2. Enable the ‘Control Mouse Cursor’-setting of the InteractionManager-component. This setting transfers the position and clicks of the hand cursor to the mouse cursor, this way enabling interaction with the GUI buttons, toggles and other components.
3. If you need drag-and-drop functionality for interaction with the GUI, enable the ‘Control Mouse Drag’-setting of the InteractionManager-component. This setting starts mouse dragging, as soon as it detects hand grip and continues the dragging until hand release is detected. If you enable this setting, you can also click on GUI buttons with a hand grip, instead of the usual hand click (i.e. staying in place, over the button, for about 2 seconds).

How to get the depth- or color-camera textures:

First off, make sure that ‘Compute User Map’-setting of the KinectManager-component is enabled, if you need the depth texture, or ‘Compute Color Map’-setting of the KinectManager-component is enabled, if you need the color camera texture. Then write something like this in the Update()-method of your script:

KinectManager manager = KinectManager.Instance;
if(manager && manager.IsInitialized())
{
    Texture2D depthTexture = manager.GetUsersLblTex();
    Texture2D colorTexture = manager.GetUsersClrTex();
    // do something with the textures
}

How to get the position of a body joint:

This is demonstrated in KinectScripts/Samples/GetJointPositionDemo-script. You can add it as a component to a game object in your scene to see it in action. Just select the needed joint and optionally enable saving to a csv-file. Do not forget that to add the KinectManager as component to a game object in your scene. It is usually a component of the MainCamera in the example scenes. Here is the main part of the demo-script that retrieves the position of the selected joint:

KinectInterop.JointType joint = KinectInterop.JointType.HandRight;
KinectManager manager = KinectManager.Instance;

if(manager && manager.IsInitialized())
{
    if(manager.IsUserDetected())
    {
        long userId = manager.GetPrimaryUserID();

        if(manager.IsJointTracked(userId, (int)joint))
        {
            Vector3 jointPos = manager.GetJointPosition(userId, (int)joint);
            // do something with the joint position
        }
    }
}

How to make a game object rotate as the user:

This is similar to the previous example and is demonstrated in KinectScripts/Samples/FollowUserRotation-script. To see it in action, you can create a cube in your scene and add the script as a component to it. Do not forget to add the KinectManager as component to a game object in your scene. It is usually a component of the MainCamera in the example scenes.

How to make a game object follow user’s head position and rotation:

You need the KinectManager and FacetrackingManager added as components to a game object in your scene. For example, they are components of the MainCamera in the KinectAvatarsDemo-scene. Then, to get the position of the head and orientation of the neck, you need code like this in your script:

KinectManager manager = KinectManager.Instance;

if(manager && manager.IsInitialized())
{
    if(manager.IsUserDetected())
    {
        long userId = manager.GetPrimaryUserID();

        if(manager.IsJointTracked(userId, (int)KinectInterop.JointType.Head))
        {
            Vector3 headPosition = manager.GetJointPosition(userId, (int)KinectInterop.JointType.Head);
            Quaternion neckRotation = manager.GetJointOrientation(userId, (int)KinectInterop.JointType.Neck);
            // do something with the head position and neck orientation
        }
    }
}

How to get the face-points’ coordinates:

You need a reference to the respective FaceFrameResult-object. This is demonstrated in KinectScripts/Samples/GetFacePointsDemo-script. You can add it as a component to a game object in your scene, to see it in action. To get a face point coordinates in your script you need to invoke its public GetFacePoint()-function. Do not forget to add the KinectManager and FacetrackingManager as components to a game object in your scene. For example, they are components of the MainCamera in the KinectAvatarsDemo-scene.

How to mix Kinect-captured movement with Mecanim animation

1. Use the AvatarControllerClassic instead of AvatarController-component. Assign only these joints that have to be animated by the sensor.
2. Set the SmoothFactor-setting of AvatarControllerClassic to 0, to apply the detected bone orientations instantly.
3. Create an avatar-body-mask and apply it to the Mecanim animation layer. In this mask, disable Mecanim animations of the Kinect-animated joints mentioned above. Do not disable the root-joint!
4. Enable the ‘Late Update Avatars’-setting of KinectManager (component of MainCamera in the example scenes).
5. Run the scene to check the setup. When a player gets recognized by the sensor, part of his joints will be animated by the AvatarControllerClassic component, and the other part – by the Animator component.

How to add your models to the FittingRoom-demo

1. For each of your fbx-models, import the model and select it in the Assets-view in Unity editor.
2. Select the Rig-tab in Inspector. Set the AnimationType to ‘Humanoid’ and the AvatarDefinition to ‘Create from this model’.
3. Press the Apply-button. Then press the Configure-button to check if all required joints are correctly assigned. The clothing models usually don’t use all joints, which can make the avatar definition invalid. In this case you can assign manually the missing joints (shown in red).
4. Keep in mind: The joint positions in the model must match the structure of the Kinect-joints. You can see them, for instance in the KinectOverlayDemo2. Otherwise the model may not overlay the user’s body properly.
5. Create a sub-folder for your model category (Shirts, Pants, Skirts, etc.) in the FittingRoomDemo/Resources-folder.
6. Create a sub-folders with subsequent numbers (0000, 0001, 0002, etc.) for all imported in p.1 models, in the model category folder.
7. Move your models into these numerical folders, one model per folder, along with the needed materials and textures. Rename the model’s fbx-file to ‘model.fbx’.
8. You can put a preview image for each model in jpeg-format (100 x 143px, 24bpp) in the respective model folder. Then rename it to ‘preview.jpg.bytes’. If you don’t put a preview image, the fitting-room demo will display ‘No preview’ in the model-selection menu.
9. Open the FittingRoomDemo1-scene.
10. Add a ModelSelector-component for each model category to the KinectController game object. Set its ‘Model category’-setting to be the same as the name of sub-folder created in p.5 above. Set the ‘Number of models’-setting to reflect the number of sub-folders created in p.6 above.
11. The other settings of your ModelSelector-component must be similar to the existing ModelSelector in the demo. I.e. ‘Model relative to camera’ must be set to ‘BackgroundCamera’, ‘Foreground camera’ must be set to ‘MainCamera’, ‘Continuous scaling’ – enabled. The scale-factor settings may be set initially to 1 and the ‘Vertical offset’-setting to 0. Later you can adjust them slightly to provide the best model-to-body overlay.
12. Enable the ‘Keep selected model’-setting of the ModelSelector-component, if you want the selected model to continue overlaying user’s body, after the model category changes. This is useful, if there are several categories (i.e. ModelSelectors), for instance for shirts, pants, skirts, etc. In this case the selected shirt model will still overlay user’s body, when the category changes and the user starts selects pants, for instance.
13. The CategorySelector-component provides gesture control for changing models and categories, and takes care of switching model categories (e.g for shirts, pants, ties, etc.) for the same user. There is already a CategorySelector for the 1st user (player-index 0) in the scene, so you don’t need to add more.
14. If you plan for multi-user fitting-room, add one CategorySelector-component for each other user. You may also need to add the respective ModelSelector-components for model categories that will be used by these users, too.
15. Run the scene to ensure that your models can be selected in the list and they overlay the user’s body correctly. Experiment a bit if needed, to find the values of scale-factors and vertical-offset settings that provide the best model-to-body overlay.
16. If you want to turn off the cursor interaction in the scene, disable the InteractionManager-component of KinectController-game object. If you want to turn off the gestures (swipes for changing models & hand raises for changing categories), disable the respective settings of the CategorySelector-component. If you want to turn off or change the T-pose calibration, change the ‘Player calibration pose’-setting of KinectManager-component.
17. You can use the FittingRoomDemo2 scene, to utilize or experiment with a single overlay model. Adjust the scale-factor settings of AvatarScaler to fine tune the scale of the whole body, arm- or leg-bones of the model, if needed. Enable the ‘Continuous Scaling’ setting, if you want the model to rescale on each Update.
18. If the clothing/overlay model uses the Standard shader, set its ‘Rendering mode’ to ‘Cutout’. See this comment below for more information.

How to set up the sensor height and angle

There are two very important settings of the KinectManager-component that influence the calculation of users’ and joints’ space coordinates, hence almost all user-related visualizations in the demo scenes. Here is how to set them correctly:

1. Set the ‘Sensor height’-setting, as to how high above the ground is the sensor, in meters. The by-default value is 1, i.e. 1.0 meter above the ground, which may not be your case.
2. Set the ‘Sensor angle’-setting, as to the tilt angle of the sensor, in degrees. Use positive degrees if the sensor is tilted up, negative degrees – if it is tilted down. The by-default value is 0, which means 0 degrees, i.e. the sensor is not tilted at all.
3. Because it is not so easy to estimate the sensor angle manually, you can use the ‘Auto height angle’-setting to find out this value. Select ‘Show info only’-option and run the demo-scene. Then stand in front of the sensor. The information on screen will show you the rough height and angle-settings, as estimated by the sensor itself. Repeat this 2-3 times and write down the values you see.
4. Finally, set the ‘Sensor height’ and ‘Sensor angle’ to the estimated values you find best. Set the ‘Auto height angle’-setting back to ‘Dont use’.
5. If you find the height and angle values estimated by the sensor good enough, or if your sensor setup is not fixed, you can set the ‘Auto height angle’-setting to ‘Auto update’. It will update the ‘Sensor height’ and ‘Sensor angle’-settings continuously, when there are users in the field of view of the sensor.

Are there any events, when a user is detected or lost

There are no special event handlers for user-detected/user-lost events, but there are two other options you can use:

1. In the Update()-method of your script, invoke the GetUsersCount()-function of KinectManager and compare the returned value to a previously saved value, like this:

KinectManager manager = KinectManager.Instance;
if(manager && manager.IsInitialized())
{
    int usersNow = manager.GetUsersCount();

    if(usersNow > usersSaved)
    {
        // new user detected
    }
    if(usersNow < usersSaved)
    {
        // user lost
    }

    usersSaved = usersNow;
}

2. Create a class that implements KinectGestures.GestureListenerInterface and add it as component to a game object in the scene. It has methods UserDetected() and UserLost(), which you can use as user-event handlers. The other methods could be left empty or return the default value (true). See the SimpleGestureListener or GestureListener-classes, if you need an example.

How to process discrete gestures like swipes and poses like hand-raises

Most of the gestures, like SwipeLeft, SwipeRight, Jump, Squat, etc. are discrete. All poses, like RaiseLeftHand, RaiseRightHand, etc. are also considered as discrete gestures. This means these gestures may report progress or not, but all of them get completed or cancelled at the end. Processing these gestures in a gesture-listener script is relatively easy. You need to do as follows:

1. In the UserDetected()-function of the script add the following line for each gesture you need to track:

manager.DetectGesture(userId, KinectGestures.Gestures.xxxxx);

2. In GestureCompleted() add code to process the discrete gesture, like this:

if(gesture == KinectGestures.Gestures.xxxxx)
{
    // gesture is detected - process it (for instance, set a flag or execute an action)
}

3. In the GestureCancelled()-function, add code to process the cancellation of the continuous gesture:

if(gesture == KinectGestures.Gestures.xxxxx)
{
    // gesture is cancelled - process it (for instance, clear the flag)
}

If you need code samples, see the SimpleGestureListener.cs or CubeGestureListener.cs-scripts.

4. From v2.8 on, KinectGestures.cs is not any more a static class, but a component that may be extended, for instance with the detection of new gestures or poses. You need to add it as component to the KinectController-game object, if you need gesture or pose detection in the scene.

How to process continuous gestures, like ZoomIn, ZoomOut and Wheel

Some of the gestures, like ZoomIn, ZoomOut and Wheel, are continuous. This means these gestures never get fully completed, but only report progress greater than 50%, as long as the gesture is detected. To process them in a gesture-listener script, do as follows:

1. In the UserDetected()-function of the script add the following line for each gesture you need to track:

manager.DetectGesture(userId, KinectGestures.Gestures.xxxxx);

2. In GestureInProgress() add code to process the continuous gesture, like this:

if(gesture == KinectGestures.Gestures.xxxxx)
{
    if(progress > 0.5f)
    {
        // gesture is detected - process it (for instance, set a flag, get zoom factor or angle)
    }
    else
    {
        // gesture is no more detected - process it (for instance, clear the flag)
    }
}

3. In the GestureCancelled()-function, add code to process the end of the continuous gesture:

if(gesture == KinectGestures.Gestures.xxxxx)
{
    // gesture is cancelled - process it (for instance, clear the flag)
}

If you need code samples, see the SimpleGestureListener.cs or ModelGestureListener.cs-scripts.

4. From v2.8 on, KinectGestures.cs is not any more a static class, but a component that may be extended, for instance with the detection of new gestures or poses. You need to add it as component to the KinectController-game object, if you need gesture or pose detection in the scene.

How to utilize visual (VGB) gestures in the K2-asset

The visual gestures, created by the Visual Gesture Builder (VGB) can be used in the K2-asset, too. To do it, follow these steps (and see the VisualGestures-game object and its components in the KinectGesturesDemo-scene):

1. Copy the gestures’ database (xxxxx.gbd) to the Resources-folder and rename it to ‘xxxxx.gbd.bytes’.
2. Add the VisualGestureManager-script as a component to a game object in the scene (see VisualGestures-game object).
3. Set the ‘Gesture Database’-setting of VisualGestureManager-component to the name of the gestures’ database, used in step 1 (‘xxxxx.gbd’).
4. Create a visual-gesture-listener to process the gestures, and add it as a component to a game object in the scene (see the SimpleVisualGestureListener-script).
5. In the GestureInProgress()-function of the gesture-listener add code to process the detected continuous gestures and in the GestureCompleted() add code to process the detected discrete gestures.

How to change the language or grammar for speech recognition

1. Make sure you have installed the needed language pack from here.
2. Set the ‘Language code’-setting of SpeechManager-component, as to the grammar language you need to use. The list of language codes can be found here (see ‘LCID Decimal’).
3. Make sure the ‘Grammar file name’-setting of SpeechManager-component corresponds to the name of the grxml.txt-file in Assets/Resources.
4. Open the grxml.txt-grammar file in Assets/Resources and set its ‘xml:lang’-attribute to the language that corresponds to the language code in step 2.
5. Make the other needed modifications in the grammar file and save it.
6. (Optional since v2.7) Delete the grxml-file with the same name in the root-folder of your Unity project (the parent folder of Assets-folder).
7. Run the scene to check, if speech recognition works correctly.

How to run the fitting-room or overlay demo in portrait mode

1. First off, add 9:16 (or 3:4) aspect-ratio to the Game view’s list of resolutions, if it is missing.
2. Select the 9:16 (or 3:4) aspect ratio of Game view, to set the main-camera output in portrait mode.
3. Open the fitting-room or overlay-demo scene and select each of the BackgroundImage(X)-game object(s). If it has a child object called RawImage, select this sub-object instead.
4. Enable the PortraitBackground-component of each of the selected BackgroundImage object(s). When finished, save the scene.
5. Run the scene and test it in portrait mode.

How to build an exe from ‘Kinect-v2 with MS-SDK’ project

By default Unity builds the exe (and the respective xxx_Data-folder) in the root folder of your Unity project. It is recommended to you use another, empty folder instead. The reason is that building the exe in the folder of your Unity project may cause conflicts between the native libraries used by the editor and the ones used by the exe, if they have different architectures (for instance the editor is 64-bit, but the exe is 32-bit).

Also, before building the exe, make sure you’ve copied the Assets/Resources-folder from the K2-asset to your Unity project. It contains the needed native libraries and custom shaders. Optionally you can remove the unneeded zip.bytes-files from the Resources-folder. This will save a lot of space in the build. For instance, if you target Kinect-v2 only, you can remove the Kinect-v1 and OpenNi2-related zipped libraries. The exe won’t need them anyway.

How to make the Kinect-v2 package work with Kinect-v1

If you have only Kinect v2 SDK or Kinect v1 SDK installed on your machine, the KinectManager should detect the installed SDK and sensor correctly. But in case you have both Kinect SDK 2.0 and SDK 1.8 installed simultaneously, the KinectManager will put preference on Kinect v2 SDK and your Kinect v1 will not be detected. The reason for this is that you can use SDK 2.0 in offline mode as well, i.e. without sensor attached. In this case you can emulate the sensor by playing recorded files in Kinect Studio 2.0.

If you want to make the KinectManager utilize the appropriate interface, depending on the currently attached sensor, open KinectScripts/Interfaces/Kinect2Interface.cs and at its start change the value of ‘sensorAlwaysAvailable’ from ‘true’ to ‘false’. After this, close and reopen the Unity editor. Then, on each start, the KinectManager will try to detect which sensor is currently attached to your machine and use the respective sensor interface. This way you could switch the sensors (Kinect v2 or v1), as to your preference, but will not be able to use the offline mode for Kinect v2. To utilize the Kinect v2 offline mode again, you need to switch ‘sensorAlwaysAvailable’ back to true.

What do the options of ‘Compute user map’-setting mean

Here are one-line descriptions of the available options:

  • RawUserDepth means that only the raw depth image values, coming from the sensor will be available, via the GetRawDepthMap()-function for instance;
  • BodyTexture means that GetUsersLblTex()-function will return the white image of the tracked users;
  • UserTexture will cause GetUsersLblTex() to return the tracked users’ histogram image;
  • CutOutTexture, combined with enabled ‘Compute color map‘-setting, means that GetUsersLblTex() will return the cut-out image of the users.

All these options (except RawUserDepth) can be tested instantly, if you enable the ‘Display user map‘-setting of KinectManager-component, too.

How to set up the user detection order

There is a ‘User detection order’-setting of the KinectManager-component. You can use it to determine how the user detection should be done, depending on your requirements. Here are short descriptions of the available options:

  • Appearance is selected by default. It means that the player indices are assigned in order of user appearance. The first detected user gets player index 0, The next one gets index 1, etc. If the user 0 gets lost, the remaining users are not reordered. The next newly detected user will take its place;
  • Distance means that player indices are assigned depending on distance of the detected users to the sensor. The closest one will get player index 0, the next closest one – index 1, etc. If a user gets lost, the player indices are reordered, depending on the distances to the remaining users;
  • Left to right means that player indices are assigned depending on the X-position of the detected users. The leftmost one will get player index 0, the next leftmost one – index 1, etc. If a user gets lost, the player indices are reordered, depending on the X-positions of the remaining users;

The user-detection area can be further limited with ‘Min user distance’, ‘Max user distance’ and ‘Max left right distance’-settings, in meters from the sensor. The maximum number of detected user can be limited by lowering the value of ‘Max tracked user’-setting.

How enable body-blending in the FittingRoom-demo, or disable it to increase FPS

If you select the MainCamera in the KinectFittingRoom1-demo scene (in v2.10 or above), you will see a component called UserBodyBlender. It is responsible for mixing the clothing model (overlaying the user) with the real world objects (including user’s body parts), depending on the distance to camera. For instance, if you arms or other real-world objects are in front of the model, you will see them overlaying the model, as expected.

You can enable the component, to turn on the user’s body-blending functionality. The ‘Depth threshold’-setting may be used to adjust the minimum distance to the front of model (in meters). It determines when a real-world’s object will become visible. It is set by default to 0.1m, but you could experiment a bit to see, if any other value works better for your models. If the scene performance (in means of FPS) is not sufficient, and body-blending is not important, you can disable the UserBodyBlender-component to increase performance.

How to build Windows-Store (UWP-8.1) application

To do it, you need at least v2.10.1 of the K2-asset. To build for ‘Windows store’, first select ‘Windows store’ as platform in ‘Build settings’, and press the ‘Switch platform’-button. Then do as follows:

1. Unzip Assets/Plugins-Metro.zip. This will create Assets/Plugins-Metro-folder.
2. Delete the KinectScripts/SharpZipLib-folder.
3. Optionally, delete all zip.bytes-files in Assets/Resources. You won’t need these libraries in Windows/Store. All Kinect-v2 libraries reside in Plugins-Metro-folder.
4. Select ‘File / Build Settings’ from the menu. Add the scenes you want to build. Select ‘Windows Store’ as platform. Select ‘8.1’ as target SDK. Then click the Build-button. Select an empty folder for the Windows-store project and wait the build to complete.
5. Go to the build-folder and open the generated solution (.sln-file) with Visual studio.
6. Change the ‘by default’ ARM-processor target to ‘x86’. The Kinect sensor is not compatible with ARM processors.
7. Right click ‘References’ in the Project-windows and select ‘Add reference’. Select ‘Extensions’ and then WindowsPreview.Kinect and Microsoft.Kinect.Face libraries. Then press OK.
8. Open solution’s manifest-file ‘Package.appxmanifest’, go to ‘Capabilities’-tab and enable ‘Microphone’ and ‘Webcam’ in the left panel. Save the manifest. This is needed to to enable the sensor, when the UWP app starts up. Thanks to Yanis Lukes (aka Pendrokar) for providing this info!
9. Build the project. Run it, to test it locally. Don’t forget to turn on Windows developer mode on your machine.

How to work with multiple users

Kinect-v2 can fully track up to 6 users simultaneously. That’s why many of the Kinect-related components, like AvatarController, InteractionManager, model & category-selectors, gesture & interaction listeners, etc. have a setting called ‘Player index’. If set to 0, the respective component will track the 1st detected user. If set to 1, the component will track the 2nd detected use. If set to 2 – the 3rd user, etc. The order of user detection may be specified with the ‘User detection order’-setting of the KinectManager (component of KinectController game object).

How to use the FacetrackingManager

The FacetrackingManager-component may be used for several purposes. First, adding it as component of KinectController will provide more precise neck and head tracking, when there are avatars in the scene (humanoid models utilizing the AvatarController-component). If HD face tracking is needed, you can enable the ‘Get face model data’-setting of FacetrackingManager-component. Keep in mind that using HD face tracking will lower performance and may cause memory leaks, which can cause Unity crash after multiple scene restarts. Please use this feature carefully.

In case of ‘Get face model data’ enabled, don’t forget to assign a mesh object (e.g. Quad) to the ‘Face model mesh’-setting. Pay also attention to the ‘Textured model mesh’-setting. The available options are: ‘None’ – means the mesh will not be textured; ‘Color map’ – the mesh will get its texture from the color camera image, i.e. it will reproduce user’s face; ‘Face rectangle’ – the face mesh will be textured with its material’s Albedo texture, whereas the UI coordinates will match the detected face rectangle.

Finally, you can use the FacetrackingManager public API to get a lot of face-tracking data, like the user’s head position and rotation, animation units, shape units, face model vertices, etc.

How to add background image to the FittingRoom-demo (updated for v2.14 and later)

To replace the color-camera background in the FittingRoom-scene with a background image of your choice, please do as follows:

1. Enable the BackgroundRemovalManager-component of the KinectController-game object in the scene.
2. Make sure the ‘Compute user map’-setting of KinectManager (component of the KinectController, too) is set to ‘Body texture’, and the ‘Compute color map’-setting is enabled.
3. Set the needed background image as texture of the RawImage-component of BackgroundImage1-game object in the scene.
4. Run the scene to check, if it works as expected.

How to move the FPS-avatars of positionally tracked users in VR environment

There are two options for moving first-person avatars in VR-environment (the 1st avatar-demo scene in K2VR-asset):

1. If you use the Kinect’s positional tracking, turn off the Oculus/Vive positional tracking, because their coordinates are different to Kinect’s.
2. If you prefer to use the Oculus/Vive positional tracking:
– enable the ‘External root motion’-setting of the AvatarController-component of avatar’s game object. This will disable avatar motion as to Kinect special coordinates.
– enable the HeadMover-component of avatar’s game object, and assign the MainCamera as ‘Target transform’, to follow the Oculus/Vive position.

Now try to run the scene. If there are issues with the MainCamera used as positional target, do as follows:
– add an empty game object to the scene. It will be used to follow the Oculus/Vive positions.
– assign the newly created game object to the ‘Target transform’-setting of the HeadMover-component.
– add a script to the newly created game object, and in that script’s Update()-function set programatically the object’s transform position to be the current Oculus/Vive position.

How to create your own gestures

For gesture recognition there are two options – visual gestures (created with the Visual Gesture Builder, part of Kinect SDK 2.0) and programmatic gestures, coded in KinectGestures.cs or a class that extends it. The programmatic gestures detection consists mainly of tracking the position and movement of specific joints, relative to some other joints. For more info regarding how to create your own programmatic gestures look at this tip below.

The scenes demonstrating the detection of programmatic gestures are located in the KinectDemos/GesturesDemo-folder. The KinectGesturesDemo1-scene shows how to utilize discrete gestures, and the KinectGesturesDemo2-scene is about continuous gestures.

And here is a video on creating and checking for visual gestures. Please check KinectDemos/GesturesDemo/VisualGesturesDemo-scene too, to see how to use visual gestures in Unity. A major issue with the visual gestures is that they usually work in the 32-bit builds only.

How to enable or disable the tracking of inferred joints

First, keep in mind that:
1. There is ‘Ignore inferred joints’-setting of the KinectManager. KinectManager is usually a component of the KinectController-game object in demo scenes.
2. There is a public API method of KinectManager, called IsJointTracked(). This method is utilized by various scripts & components in the demo scenes.

Here is how it works:
The Kinect SDK tracks the positions of all body joints’ together with their respective tracking states. These states can be Tracked, NotTracked or Inferred. When the ‘Ignore inferred joints’-setting is enabled, the IsJointTracked()-method returns true, when the tracking state is Tracked or Inferred, and false when the state is NotTracked. I.e. both tracked and inferred joints are considered valid. When the setting is disabled, the IsJointTracked()-method returns true, when the tracking state is Tracked, and false when the state is NotTracked or Inferred. I.e. only the really tracked joints are considered valid.

How to build exe with the Kinect-v2 plugins provided by Microsoft

In case you’re targeting Kinect-v2 sensor only, and would like to avoid packing all native libraries that come with the K2-asset in the build, as well as unpacking them into the working directory of the executable afterwards, do as follows:

1. Download and unzip the Kinect-v2 Unity Plugins from here.
2. Open your Unity project. Select ‘Assets / Import Package / Custom Package’ from the menu and import only the Plugins-folder from ‘Kinect.2.0.1410.19000.unitypackage’. You can find it in the unzipped package from p.1 above. Please don’t import anything from the ‘Standard Assets’-folder of the unitypackage. All needed standard assets are already present in the K2-asset.
3. If you are using the FacetrackingManager in your scenes, import only the Plugins-folder from ‘Kinect.Face.2.0.1410.19000.unitypackage’ as well. If you are using visual gestures (i.e. VisualGestureManager in your scenes), import only the Plugins-folder from ‘Kinect.VisualGestureBuilder.2.0.1410.19000.unitypackage’, too. Again, please don’t import anything from the ‘Standard Assets’-folders of these unitypackages. All needed standard assets are already present in the K2-asset.
4. Delete KinectV2UnityAddin.x64.zip & NuiDatabase.zip (or all zipped libraries) from the K2Examples/Resources-folder. You can see them as .zip-files in the Assets-window, or as .zip.bytes-files in the Windows explorer. You are going to use the Kinect-v2 sensor only, so all these zipped libraries are not needed any more.
5. Delete all dlls in the root-folder of your Unity project. The root-folder is the parent-folder of the Assets-folder of your project, and is not visible in the Editor. You may need to stop the Unity editor. Delete the NuiDatabase- and vgbtechs-folders in the root-folder, as well. These dlls and folders are no more needed, because they are part of the project’s Plugins-folder now.
6. Open Unity editor again, load the project and try to run the demo scenes in the project, to make sure they work as expected.
7. If everything is OK, build the executable again. This should work for both x86 and x86_64-architectures, as well as for Windows-Store, SDK 8.1.

How to build Windows-Store (UWP-10) application

To do it, you need at least v2.12.2 of the K2-asset. Then follow these steps:

1. (optional, as of v2.14.1) Delete the KinectScripts/SharpZipLib-folder. It is not needed for UWP. If you leave it, it may cause syntax errors later.
2. Open ‘File / Build Settings’ in Unity editor, switch to ‘Windows store’ platform and select ‘Universal 10’ as SDK. Make sure ‘.Net’ is selected as scripting backend. Optionally enable the ‘Unity C# Project’ and ‘Development build’-settings, if you’d like to edit the Unity scripts in Visual studio later.
3. Press the ‘Build’-button, select output folder and wait for Unity to finish exporting the UWP-Visual studio solution.
4. Close or minimize the Unity editor, then open the exported UWP solution in Visual studio.
5. Select x86 or x64 as target platform in Visual studio.
6. Open ‘Package.appmanifest’ of the main project, and on tab ‘Capabilities’ enable ‘Microphone’ & ‘Webcam’. These may be enabled in the Windows-store’s Player settings in Unity, too.
7. If you have enabled the ‘Unity C# Project’-setting in p.2 above, right click on ‘Assembly-CSharp’-project in the Solution explorer, select ‘Properties’ from the context menu, and then select ‘Windows 10 Anniversary Edition (10.0; Build 14393)’ as ‘Target platform’. Otherwise you will get compilation errors.
8. Build and run the solution, on the local or remote machine. It should work now.

Please mind the FacetrackingManager and SpeechRecognitionManager-components, hence the scenes that use them, will not work with the current version of the K2-UWP interface.

How to run the projector-demo scene (v2.13 and later)

To run the KinectProjectorDemo-scene, you need to calibrate the projector to the Kinect sensor first. To do it, please follow these steps:

1. To do the needed sensor-projector calibration, you first need to download RoomAliveToolkit, and then open and build the ProCamCalibration-project in Microsoft Visual Studio 2015 or later. For your convenience, here is a ready-made build of the needed executables, made with VS-2015.
2. Then open the ProCamCalibration-page and follow carefully the instructions in ‘Tutorial: Calibrating One Camera and One Projector’, from ‘Room setup’ to ‘Inspect the results’.
3. After the ProCamCalibration finishes successfully, copy the generated calibration xml-file to the KinectDemos/ProjectorDemo/Resources-folder of the K2-asset.
4. Open the KinectProjectorDemo-scene in Unity editor, select the MainCamera-game object in Hierarchy, and drag the calibration xml-file generated by ProCamCalibrationTool to the ‘Calibration Xml’-setting of its ProjectorCamera-component. Please also check, if the value of ‘Proj name in config’-setting is the same as the projector name set in the calibration xml-file (usually ‘0’).
5. Set the projector to duplicate the main screen, enable ‘Maximize on play’ in Editor (or build the scene), and run the scene in full-screen mode. Walk in front of the sensor, to check if the projected skeleton overlays correctly the user’s body. You can also try to enable ‘U_Character’ game object in the scene, to see how a virtual 3D-model can overlay the user’s body at runtime.

How to render background and the background-removal image on the scene background

First off, if you want to replace the color-camera background in the FittingRoom-demo scene with the background-removal image, please see and follow these steps.

For all other demo-scenes: You can replace the color-camera image on scene background with the background-removal image, by following these (rather complex) steps:

1. Create an empty game object in the scene, name it BackgroundImage1, and add ‘GUI Texture’-component to it (this will change after the release of Unity 2017.2, because it deprecates GUI-Textures). Set its Transform position to (0.5, 0.5, 0) to center it on the screen. This object will be used to render the scene background, so you can select a suitable picture for the Texture-setting of its GUITexture-component. If you leave its Texture-setting to None, a skybox or solid color will be rendered as scene background.

2. In a similar way, create a BackgroundImage2-game object. This object will be used to render the detected users, so leave the Texture-setting of its GUITexture-component to None (it will be set at runtime by a script), and set the Y-scale of the object to -1. This is needed to flip the rendered texture vertically. The reason: Unity textures are rendered bottom to top, while the Kinect images are top to bottom.

3. Add KinectScripts/BackgroundRemovalManager-script as component to the KinectController-game object in the scene (if it is not there yet). This is needed to provide the background removal functionality to the scene.

4. Add KinectDemos/BackgroundRemovalDemo/Scripts/ForegroundToImage-script as component to the BackgroundImage2-game object. This component will set the foreground texture, created at runtime by the BackgroundRemovalManager-component, as Texture of the GUI-Texture component (see p2 above).

Now the tricky part: Two more cameras are needed to display the user image over the scene background – one to render the background picture, 2nd one to render the user image on top of it, and finally – the main camera – to render the 3D objects on top of the background cameras.  Cameras in Unity have a setting called ‘Culling Mask’, where you can set the layers rendered by each camera. There are also two more settings: Depth and ‘Clear flags’ that may be used to change the cameras rendering order.

5. In our case, two extra layers will be needed for the correct rendering of background cameras. Select ‘Add layer’ from the Layer-dropdown in the top-right corner of the Inspector and add 2 layers – ‘BackgroundLayer1’ and ‘BackgroundLayer2’, as shown below. Unfortunately, when Unity exports the K2-package, it doesn’t export the extra layers too. That’s why the extra layers are missing in the demo-scenes.

6. After you have added the extra layers, select the BackgroundImage1-object in Hierarchy and set its layer to ‘BackgroundLayer1’. Then select the BackgroundImage2 and set its layer to ‘BackgroundLayer2’.

7. Create a camera-object in the scene and name it BackgroundCamera1. Set its CullingMask to ‘BackgroundLayer1’ only. Then set its ‘Depth’-setting to (-2) and its ‘Clear flags’-setting to ‘Skybox’ or ‘Solid color’. This means this camera will render first, will clear the output and then render the texture of BackgroundImage1. Don’t forget to disable its AudioListener-component, too. Otherwise, expect endless warnings in the console, regarding multiple audio listeners in the scene.

8. Create a 2nd camera-object and name it BackgroundCamera2. Set its CullingMask to ‘BackgroundLayer2’ only, its ‘Depth’ to (-1) and its ‘Clear flags’ to ‘Depth only’. This means this camera will render 2nd (because -1 > -2), will not clear the previous camera rendering, but instead render the BackgroundImage2 texture on top of it. Again, don’t forget to disable its AudioListener-component.

9. Finally, select the ‘Main Camera’ in the scene. Set its ‘Depth’ to 0 and ‘Clear flags’ to ‘Depth only’. In its ‘Culling mask’ disable ‘BackgroundLayer1’ and ‘BackgroundLayer2’, because they are already rendered by the background cameras. This way the main camera will render all other layers in the scene, on top of the background cameras (depth: 0 > -1 > -2).

If you need a practical example of the above setup, please look at the objects, layers and cameras of the KinectDemos/BackgroundRemovalDemo/KinectBackgroundRemoval1-demo scene.

How to run the demo scenes on non-Windows platforms

Starting with v2.14 of the K2-asset you can run and build many of the demo-scenes on non-Windows platform. In this case you can utilize the KinectDataServer and KinectDataClient components, to transfer the Kinect body and interaction data over the network. The same approach is used by the K2VR-asset. Here is what to do:

1. Add KinectScripts/KinectDataClient.cs as component to KinectController-game object in the client scene. It will replace the direct connection to the sensor with connection to the KinectDataServer-app over the network.
2. On the machine, where the Kinect-sensor is connected, run KinectDemos/KinectDataServer/KinectDataServer-scene or download the ready-built KinectDataServer-app for the same version of Unity editor, as the one running the client scene. The ready-built KinectDataServer-app can be found on this page.
3. Make sure the KinectDataServer and the client scene run in the same subnet. This is needed, if you’d like the client to discover automatically the running instance of KinectDataServer. Otherwise you would need to set manually the ‘Server host’ and ‘Server port’-settings of the KinectDataClient-component.
4. Run the client scene to make sure it connects to the server. If it doesn’t, check the console for error messages.
5. If the connection between the client and server is OK, and the client scene works as expected, build it for the target platform and test it there too.

How to workaround the user tracking issue, when the user is turned back

Starting with v2.14 of the K2-asset you can (at least roughly) work around the user tracking issue, when the user is turned back. Here is what to do:

1. Add FacetrackingManager-component to your scene, if there isn’t one there already. The face-tracking is needed for front & back user detection.
2. Enable the ‘Allow turn arounds’-setting of KinectManager. The KinectManager is component of KinectController-game object in all demo scenes.
3. Run the scene to test it. Keep in mind this feature is only a workaround (not a solution) for an issue in Kinect SDK. The issue is that by design Kinect tracks correctly only users who face the sensor. The side tracking is not smooth, as well. And finally, this workaround is experimental and may not work in all cases.

How to get the full scene depth image as texture

If you’d like to get the full scene depth image, instead of user-only depth image, please follow these steps:

1. Open Resources/DepthShader.shader and uncomment the commented out else-part of the ‘if’, you can see near the end of the shader. Save the shader and go back to the Unity editor.
2. Make sure the ‘Compute user map’-setting of the KinectManager is set to ‘User texture’. KinectManager is component of the KinectController-game object in all demo scenes.
3. Optionally enable the ‘Display user map’-setting of KinectManager, if you want to see the depth texture on screen.
4. You can also get the depth texture by calling ‘KinectManager.Instance.GetUsersLblTex()’ in your scripts, and then use it the way you want.

Some useful hints regarding AvatarController and AvatarScaler

The AvatarController-component moves the joints of the humanoid model it is attached to, according to the user’s movements in front of the Kinect-sensor. The AvatarScaler-component (used mainly in the fitting-room scenes) scales the model to match the user in means of height, arms length, etc. Here are some useful hints regarding these components:

1. If you need the avatar to move around its initial position, make sure the ‘Pos relative to camera’-setting of its AvatarController is set to ‘None’.
2. If ‘Pos relative to camera’ references a camera instead, the avatar’s position with respect to that camera will be the same as the user’s position with respect to the Kinect sensor.
3. If ‘Pos relative to camera’ references a camera and ‘Pos rel overlay color’-setting is enabled too, the 3d position of avatar is adjusted to overlay the user on color camera feed.
4. In this last case, if the model has AvatarScaler component too, you should set the ‘Foreground camera’-setting of AvatarScaler to the same camera. Then scaling calculations will be based on the adjusted (overlayed) joint positions, instead of on the joint positions in space.
5. The ‘Continuous scaling’-setting of AvatarScaler determines whether the model scaling should take place only once when the user is detected (when the setting is disabled), or continuously – on each update (when the setting is enabled).

If you need the avatar to obey physics and gravity, disable the ‘Vertical movement’-setting of the AvatarController-component. Disable the ‘Grounded feet’-setting too, if it is enabled. Then enable the ‘Freeze rotation’-setting of its Rigidbody-component for all axes (X, Y & Z). Make sure the ‘Is Kinematic’-setting is disabled as well, to make the physics control the avatar’s rigid body.

If you want to stop the sensor control of the humanoid model in the scene, you can remove the AvatarController-component of the model. If you want to resume the sensor control of the model, add the AvatarController-component to the humanoid model again. After you remove or add this component, don’t forget to call ‘KinectManager.Instance.refreshAvatarControllers();’, to update the list of avatars KinectManager keeps track of.

How to setup the K2-package (v2.16 or later) to work with Orbbec Astra sensors (deprecated – use Nuitrack)

1. Go to https://orbbec3d.com/develop/ and click on ‘Download Astra Driver and OpenNI 2’. Here is the shortcut: http://www.orbbec3d.net/Tools_SDK_OpenNI/3-Windows.zip
2. Unzip the downloaded file, go to ‘Sensor Driver’-folder and run SensorDriver_V4.3.0.4.exe to install the Orbbec Astra driver.
3. Connect the Orbbec Astra sensor. If the driver is installed correctly, you should see it in the Device Manager, under ‘Orbbec’.
4. If you have Kinect SDK 2.0 installed, please open KinectScripts/Interfaces/Kinect2Interface.cs and change ‘sensorAlwaysAvailable = true;’ at the beginning of the class to ‘sensorAlwaysAvailable = false;’. More information about this action can be found here.
5. If you have ‘Kinect SDK 2.0’ installed on the same machine, look at this tip above, to see how to turn off the K2-sensor-always-available flag.
6. Run one of the avatar-demo scenes to check, if the Orbbec Astra interface works. The sensor should light up and the user(s) should be detected.

How to setup the K2-asset (v2.17 or later) to work with Nuitrack body tracking SDK (updated 11.Jun.2018)

1. To install Nuitrack SDK, follow the instructions on this page, for your respective platform. Nuitrack installation archives can be found here.
2. Connect the sensor, go to [NUITRACK_HOME]/activation_tool-folder and run the Nuitrack-executable. Press the Test-button at the top. You should see the depth stream coming from the sensor. And if you move in front of the sensor, you should see how Nuitrack SDK tracks your body and joints.
3. If you can’t see the depth image and body tracking, when the sensor connected, this would mean Nuitrack SDK is not working properly. Close the Nuitrack-executable, go to [NUITRACK_HOME]/bin/OpenNI2/Drivers and delete (or move somewhere else) the SenDuck-driver and its ini-file. Then go back to step 2 above, and try again.
4. If you have ‘Kinect SDK 2.0‘ installed on the same machine, look at this tip, to see how to turn off the K2-sensor always-available flag.
5. Please mind, you can expect crashes, while using Nuitrack SDK with Unity. The two most common crash-causes are: a) the sensor is not connected when you start the scene; b) you’re using Nuitrack trial version, which will stop after 3 minutes of scene run, and will cause Unity crash as side effect.
6. If you buy a Nuitrack license, don’t forget to import it into Nuitrack’s activation tool. On Windows this is: <nuitrack-home>\activation_tool\Nuitrack.exe. You can use the same app to test the currently connected sensor, as well. If everything works, you are ready to test the Nuitrack interface in Unity..
7. Run one of the avatar-demo scenes to check, if the Nuitrack interface, the sensor depth stream and Nuitrack body tracking works. Run the color-collider demo scene, to check if the color stream works, as well.
8. Please mind: The scenes that rely on color image overlays may or may not work correctly. This may be fixed in future K2-asset updates.

How to control Keijiro’s Skinner-avatars with the Avatar-Controller component

1. Download Keijiro’s Skinner project from its GitHub-repository.
2. Import the K2-asset from Unity asset store into the same project. Delete K2Examples/KinectDemos-folder. The demo scenes are not needed here.
3. Open Assets/Test/Test-scene. Disable Neo-game object in Hierarchy. It is not really needed.
4. Create an empty game object in Hierarchy and name it KinectController, to be consistent with the other demo scenes. Add K2Examples/KinectScripts/KinectManager.cs as component to this object. The KinectManager-component is needed by all other Kinect-related components.
5. Select ‘Neo (Skinner Source)’-game object in Hierarchy. Delete ‘Mocaps’ from the Controller-setting of its Animator-component, to prevent playing the recorded mo-cap animation, when the scene starts.
6. Press ‘Select’ below the object’s name, to find model’s asset in the project. Disable ‘Optimize game objects’-setting on its Rig-tab, and make sure its rig is Humanoid. Otherwise the AvatarController will not find the model’s joints it needs to control.
7. Add K2Examples/KinectScripts/AvatarController-component to ‘Neo (Skinner Source)’-game object in the scene, and enable its ‘Mirrored movement’ and ‘Vertical movement’-settings. Make sure the object’s transform rotation is (0, 180, 0).
8. Optionally, disable the script components of ‘Camera tracker’, ‘Rotation’, ‘Distance’ & ‘Shake’-parent game objects of the main camera in the scene, if you’d like to prevent the camera’s own animated movements.
9. Run the scene and start moving in front of the sensor, to see the effect. Try the other skinner renderers as well. They are children of ‘Skinner Renderers’-game object in the scene.

How to track a ball hitting a wall (hints)

This is a question I was asked quite a lot recently, because there are many possibilities for interactive playgrounds out there. For instance: virtual football or basketball shooting, kids throwing balls at projected animals on the wall, people stepping on virtual floor, etc. Here are some hints how to achieve it:

1. The only thing you need in this case, is to process the raw depth image coming from the sensor. You can get it by calling KinectManager.Instance.GetRawDepthMap(). It is an array of short-integers (DepthW x DepthH in size), representing the distance to the detected objects for each point of the depth image, in mm.
2. You know the distance from the sensor to the wall in meters, hence in mm too. It is a constant, so you can filter out all depth points that represent object distances closer than 1-2 meters (or less) from the wall. They are of no interest here, because too far from the wall. You need to experiment a bit to find the exact filtering distance.
3. Use some CV algorithm to locate the centers of the blobs of remaining, unfiltered depth points. There may be only one blob in case of one ball, or many blobs in case of many balls, or people walking on the floor.
4. When these blobs (and their respective centers) is at maximum distance, close to the fixed distance to the wall, this would mean the ball(s) have hit the wall.
5. Map the depth coordinates of the blob centers to color camera coordinates, by using KinectManager.Instance.MapDepthPointToColorCoords(), and you will have the screen point of impact, or KinectManager.Instance.MapDepthPointToSpaceCoords(), if you prefer to get the 3D position of the ball at the moment of impact. If you are not sure how to do the sensor to projector calibration, look at this tip.

How to create your own programmatic gestures

The programmatic gestures are implemented in KinectScripts/KinectGestures.cs or class that extends it. The detection of a gesture consists of checking for gesture-specific poses in the different gesture states. Look below for more information.

1. Open KinectScripts/KinectGestures.cs and add the name of your gesture(s) to the Gestures-enum. As you probably know, the enums in C# cannot be extended. This is the reason you should modify it to add your unique gesture names here. Alternatively, you can use the predefined UserGestureX-names for your gestures, if you prefer not to modify KinectGestures.cs.
2. Find CheckForGesture()-method in the opened class and add case(s) for the new gesture(s), at the end of its internal switch. It will contain the code that detects the gesture.
3. In the gesture-case, add an internal switch that will check for user pose in the respective state. See the code of other simple gesture (like RaiseLeftHand, RaiseRightHand, SwipeLeft or SwipeRight), if you need example.

In CheckForGestures() you have access to the jointsPos-array, containing all joint positions and jointsTracked-array, containing showing whether the the respective joints are currently tracked or not. The joint positions are in world coordinates, in meters.

The gesture detection code usually consists of checking for specific user poses in the current gesture state. The gesture detection always starts with the initial state 0. At this state you should check if the gesture has started. For instance, if the tracked joint (hand, foot or knee) is positioned properly relative to some other joint (like body center, hip or shoulder). If it is, this means the gesture has started. Save the position of the tracked joint, the current time and increment the state to 1. All this may be done by calling SetGestureJoint().

Then, at the next state (1), you should check if the gesture continues successfully or not. For instance, if the tracked joint has moved as expected relative to the other joint, and within the expected time frame in seconds. If it’s not, cancel the gesture and start over from state 0. This could be done by calling SetGestureCancelled()-method.

Otherwise, if this is the last expected state, consider the gesture is completed, call CheckPoseComplete() with last parameter 0 (i.e. don’t wait), to mark the gesture as complete. In case of gesture cancelation or completion, the gesture listeners will be notified.

If the gesture is successful so far, but not yet completed, call SetGestureJoint() again to save the current joint position and timestamp, as well as increment the gesture state again. Then go on with the next gesture-state processing, until the gesture gets completed. It would be also good to set the progress of the gesture the gestureData-structure, when the gesture consists of more than two states.

The demo scenes related to checking for programmatic gestures are located in the KinectDemos/GesturesDemo-folder. The KinectGesturesDemo1-scene shows how to utilize discrete gestures, and the KinectGesturesDemo2-scene is about the continuous gestures.

More tips regarding listening for discrete and continuous programmatic gestures in Unity scenes can be found above.

What is the file-format used by the KinectRecorderPlayer-component (KinectRecorderDemo)

The KinectRecorderPlayer-component can record or replay body-recording files. These are text files, where each line represents a body-frame at a specific moment in time. You can use it to replay or analyze the body-frame recordings in your own tools. Here is the format of each line. See the sample body-frames below, for reference.

0. time in seconds, since the start of recording, followed by ‘|’. All other field separators are ‘,’.
This value is used by the KinectRecorderPlayer-component for time-sync, when it needs to replay the body recording.

1. body frame identifier. should be ‘kb’.
2. body-frame timestamp, coming from the Kinect SDK (ignored by the KinectManager)
3. number of max tracked bodies (6).
4. number of max tracked body joints (25).

then, follows the data for each body (6 times)
6. body tracking flag – 1 if the body is tracked, 0 if it is not tracked (the 5 zeros at the end of the lines below are for the 5 missing bodies)

if the body is tracked, then the bodyId and the data for all body joints follow. if it is not tracked – the bodyId and joint data (7-9) are skipped
7. body ID

body joint data (25 times, for all body joints – ordered by JointType (see KinectScripts/KinectInterop.cs)
8. joint tracking state – 0 means not-tracked; 1 – inferred; 2 – tracked

if the joint is inferred or tracked, the joint position data follows. if it is not-tracked, the joint position data (9) is skipped.
9. joint position data – X, Y & Z.

And here are two body-frame samples, for reference:

0.774|kb,101856122898130000,6,25,1,72057594037928806,2,-0.415,-0.351,1.922,2,-0.453,-0.058,1.971,2,-0.488,0.223,2.008,2,-0.450,0.342,2.032,2,-0.548,0.115,1.886,1,-0.555,-0.047,1.747,1,-0.374,-0.104,1.760,1,-0.364,-0.105,1.828,2,-0.330,0.103,2.065,2,-0.262,-0.100,1.963,2,-0.363,-0.068,1.798,1,-0.416,-0.078,1.789,2,-0.457,-0.334,1.847,2,-0.478,-0.757,1.915,2,-0.467,-1.048,1.943,2,-0.365,-1.043,1.839,2,-0.361,-0.356,1.929,2,-0.402,-0.663,1.795,1,-0.294,-1.098,1.806,1,-0.218,-1.081,1.710,2,-0.480,0.154,2.001,2,-0.335,-0.109,1.840,2,-0.338,-0.062,1.804,2,-0.450,-0.067,1.736,2,-0.435,-0.031,1.800,0,0,0,0,0

1.710|kb,101856132898750000,6,25,1,72057594037928806,2,-0.416,-0.351,1.922,2,-0.453,-0.059,1.972,2,-0.487,0.223,2.008,2,-0.449,0.342,2.032,2,-0.542,0.116,1.881,1,-0.555,-0.047,1.748,1,-0.374,-0.102,1.760,1,-0.364,-0.104,1.826,2,-0.327,0.102,2.063,2,-0.262,-0.100,1.963,2,-0.363,-0.065,1.799,2,-0.415,-0.071,1.785,2,-0.458,-0.334,1.848,2,-0.477,-0.757,1.914,1,-0.483,-1.116,2.008,1,-0.406,-1.127,1.917,2,-0.361,-0.356,1.928,2,-0.402,-0.670,1.796,1,-0.295,-1.100,1.805,1,-0.218,-1.083,1.710,2,-0.480,0.154,2.001,2,-0.334,-0.106,1.840,2,-0.339,-0.061,1.799,2,-0.453,-0.062,1.731,2,-0.435,-0.020,1.798,0,0,0,0,0

How to enable user gender and age detection in KinectFittingRoom1-demo scene

You can utilize the cloud face detection in KinectFittingRoom1-demo scene, if you’d like to detect the user’s gender and age, and properly adjust the model categories for him or her. The CloudFaceDetector-component uses Azure Cognitive Services for user-face detection and analysis. These services are free of charge, if you don’t exceed a certain limit (30000 requests per month and 20 per minute). Here is how to do it:

1. Go to this page and press the big blue ‘Get API Key’-button next to ‘Face API’. See this screenshot, if you need more details.
2. You will be asked to sign-in with your Microsoft account and select your Azure subscription. At the end you should land on this page.
3. Press the ‘Create a resource’-button at the upper left part of the dashboard, then select ‘AI + Machine Learning’ and then ‘Face’. You need to give the Face-service a name & resource group and select endpoint (server address) near you. Select the free payment tier, if you don’t plan a bulk of requests. Then create the service. See this screenshot, if you need more details.
4. After the Face-service is created and deployed, select ‘All resources’ at the left side of the dashboard, then the name of the created Face-serice from the list of services. Then select ‘Quick start’ from the service menu, if not already selected. Once you are there, press the ‘Keys’-link and copy one of the provided subscription keys. Don’t forget to write down the first part of the endpoint address, as well. These parameters will be needed in the next step. See this screenshot, if you need more details.
5. Go back to Unity, open KinectFittingRoom1-demo scene and select the CloudFaceController-game object in Hierarchy. Type in the (written down in 4. above) first part of the endpoint address to ‘Face service location’, and paste the copied subscription key to ‘Face subscription key’. See this screenshot, if you need more details.
6. Finally, select the KinectController-game object in Hierarchy, find its ‘Category Selector’-component and enable the ‘Detect gender age’-setting. See this screenshot, if you need more details.
7. That’s it. Save the scene and run it to try it out. Now, after the T-pose detection, the user’s face will be analyzed and you will get information regarding the user’s gender and age at the lower left part of the screen.
8. If everything is OK, you can setup the model selectors in the scene to be available only for users with specific gender and age range, as needed. See the ‘Model gender’, ‘Minimum age’ and ‘Maximum age’-settings of the available ModelSelector-components.

 

 

1,098 thoughts on “Kinect v2 Tips, Tricks and Examples

  1. Hi,
    Is it possible to restrict Kinect avatar movement and rotation for humanoid character.
    I am using AvatarControllerClassic with humanoid I want do like just to follow y axis movement.
    Please suggest me

    • I’m not sure there is API for that in Kinect SDK. But as far as I remember, the K2-sensor acts as a standard microphone device to the system. In this regard, please look at the Windows audio API.

    • KinectManager.Instance.GetUsersCount() will return the number of currently detected users. You can call it in the Update()-method of your script, to check if there is any user detected or not.

  2. Hello Rumen,
    I want to record facial expressions data onto a 3D model, can you help me on how to do that?
    My approach was to study the Kinect Recorder Demo first and then the Face detection demo and combine to achieve it. However my recorder demo is not working, i do not see any saved data when i try recording.

    • Hi, the saved file name is a setting of the KinectRecorderPlayer-component in the scene. It is usually saved in the working directory. In case of in-editor play, this is the parent-folder of the Assets-folder.

      You can see how the body data is recorder and replayed in KinectScripts/KinectRecorderPlayer.cs – it calls some methods of KinectManager (KinectInterop) to do it. In your case, you could use or modify the GetFaceParamsAsCsv() & SetFaceParamsFromCsv()-methods of FacetrackingManager.cs to extend the recorder, to record & replay the facial data, as well.

  3. Hi,
    I am developing kinect v2 gesture based game.
    I want to take picture and store in my computer on complete game for all player.
    Please suggest me for this.

    • Please look at how the PhotoShooter-component of KinectPhotoBooth-scene in KinectDemos/OverlayDemo-folder (or KinectFittingRoom1-scene in KinectDemos/FittingRoomDemo-folder). If its functionality is not enough, feel free to modify the code of PhotoShooter.cs, to match your use case.

  4. Hello Rumen,

    1st, thank you for developing this package! I’ve been having so much fun with it.

    I’m trying to make an endless runner game, where the character is propelled forward in the z-direction, and its [the character’s] position in the x and y directions is controlled by the Kinect v2. The character’s directional movement in the game is controlled by the CharacterController.Move component.

    Here’s a prime example of what I wanna do:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_s1iYuJAoQ8&t=15s

    When I attach the AvatarController script to my character, the character stays where it is and does not move forward. I tried commenting out MoveAvatar(UserID) in the script, but now the character does not follow the player position in the vertical and horizontal directions (y and x respectively).

    Kindly, if you have a fix for my problem, share it with me here. I would appreciate the help greatly since I tried go around this problem using every trick that I know, but with no luck.

    Regards,

    Jonathan K.,

    • Hi Jonathan, I think it’s not that hard to make the character move as you like. You just need to modify the MoveAvatar()-method a bit. If the forward movement is controlled by other component (CharaterController in your case), this means the AvatarController should not change the Z-position of the transform, while still changing in X & Y.

      Here is what to do: Near the end of the method, just before ‘transform.position = smoothFactor != 0f ?’, add this line: ‘targetPos.z = transform.position.z;’

      • Hi Rumen,

        Thank you so much for your help! My game now works exactly as expected.

        Regards,

  5. Hi,
    Thank you for this great asset, it’s really helpful and i have been playing around with it for a while now.
    I have 1 questions though, it’ll be great to have them resolved. Thank you in advance.
    Q1: How can we easily trigger the microphone on and of? It’s listening all the time, and i want it to listen only at specific times?

    • Hi, as far as I remember, there is no specific microphone-related API in the Kinect SDK. But to the system this is just jet another microphone. So, I suppose you can use the standard Windows API to turn the Kinect microphone on and off, as well.

      • Okay. Thankyou.
        One more thing, at end of my quiz, my scene restarts, and when the scene loads again, the script doesn’t work as expected. I am using kinect manager script to update a boolean in external script, the boolean updates when the game runs first time but in second time when the scene reloads, the boolean doesn’t get updated.
        Can you help on this small issue ?
        Thank you

      • See ‘Howto-Use-KinectManager-Across-Multiple-Scenes.pdf’ in K2Examples/_Readme-folder and the scenes in KinectDemos/MultiSceneDemo-folder, as well. In your case, I think that reloading the scene has the same effect as working with multiple scenes.

  6. Hi,
    I want to ask one thing do you have any reference to use Kinect v2 with HTML.
    If have please share with me.
    Thanks

    • When you install Kinect SDK 2.0, there are HTML-examples, as well. Look at this folder: C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Kinect\v2.0_1409\Samples\HTML

  7. Hi, my 3d model is rotating according to where i stand infront of sensor, so it’s looking at me, i want to invert the rotation of the 3d model or avatar, so when i move left, it should rotate to right. how can i achieve that?
    Thanks

  8. Hi,
    I am using my hand as cursor same as KinectFittingRoom1 but I am facing one problem UIProgressBar enable everywhere without any interaction when I stop moving my hand.
    Please suggest me to solve this.
    Thanks

    • Hi Chris. Yes, I think so, as long as you use the Kinect-v2 sensor. The tracked users should appear in the background-removal scene, as well. When the ‘Player index’-setting of the BackgroundRemovalManager-component in the scene is set to -1, it should display all tracked users. By the way, the article you cited is about the background removal for Kinect-v1.

      • OK Rumen, Thanks for your answer!
        And sorry for the missunderstood about the article.
        I hope you release an Unity Asset for the new Azure Kinect DK 😀 !

        Best regards,

        Chris.

  9. Can you explain how the raise hand to change category works in Fitting Room Scene 1? I’ve added multiple sub-folders in the resources folder but it only recognizes the one entered in Kinect Controller, how do I add the other folders?

  10. Hi Rumen. Can you please guide me how the raise hand to change category works in Fitting Room Scene 1? I’ve added multiple sub-folders with different models but it only recognizes the one entered in Kinect Controller, how do I add the other categories?

  11. Hi,
    I want to detect the smile of the player standing in fount of Kinect v2.
    can you please guide me on this to detect the smile?
    also is it possible to get the smile as value like 0-100?

    • As far as I remember, there was a face property called ‘Happy’ or something like that. Please look at the info displayed by KinectFaceTrackingDemo4-scene.

  12. Hi guys,

    I am wondering what would be the fastest way to recover a 512/424 color map.
    Actually I need a colored 512/424 texture of the depthmap mapped from the 1920/1080 color space.

    Like this one:
    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ecEW5PqdF_7_OmfvgmMNubi_0ZfXYHBu/view?usp=sharing

    The orginal Microsoft Kinect unity lib uses something like this to map – MapDepthFrameToColorSpaceUsingIntPtr

    What would be the fastest method with this lib toi do this. I would like to avoid to map every depthpixel to a color in a for loop and then do SetPixel on a texture for instance.

    Thank you so much for you help.

    • The fastest way (as to me) would be to use a shader with the color camera texture and the coordinate conversion map as input, and the converted color texture as output. This will utilize all cores of the graphics processor, and the render pipeline will provide the loop.

  13. Hi Rumen,

    Is there a latest update on Kinect suit up? We are having issues on KinectFittingRoom scene whereas the 3d model at some point randomly getting bigger than the primary user which we want to prevent. Also is there an update about the background removal together with suit up? We would like to combine those two ( Background removal with dress-up ) but we are having problems on the angle like when the user is going left or right the dress is not following accurately. Thanks.

    • I have not published an update recently, but will do it soon. Sorry, I was totally busy with the new Azure Kinect.
      Regarding KinectFittingRoom: There is a setting of the ModelSelector component(s) in the scene called ‘Continuous scaling’. Please disable it, if you have such issues. In this case, the model will be scaled only once to fit the user – when the user stands in T-pose.
      There is a BackgroundRemovalManager in the scene, too. Please enable it, if you like to use it in the FittingRoomDemo-scene.

  14. Hello Rumen,

    I have a problem. I’m trying to use Keijiro Skinner-avatars with the Avatar-Controller component and I use it successfully with just single-player and its working fine with it, but when I change the PlayerIndex from 0 to 1 and 0 to 2 it stops showing me the body movement of Skinner-avatars even not showing me the Skinner-Avatars.

    Basically, I want to use the Skinner-avatars with the multiple players like 2 or maybe 3 players can you please guide me how that will get solved?

  15. Hi Rumen, I have a small issue in KinectFittingRoom1, when I enabled BackgroundRemovalManager, the background was removed but the model was drawn behind user. How do I fix this ?

    • Hi, please try to disable the UserBodyBlender-component of the MainCamera-object in the scene. Sorry, but I can’t reproduce your issue here, and can’t give you a better advice so far.

  16. Hi Rumen Good Day.. I am using the Kinect Fitting Room2 , but the 3d Model “ModelMF” doesnt overlay my body really Good, its not just the size of arms , mostly I guess is the depth. I already tried to change some configurations like forward offset, user body blender and others but same issue. I want to get same accuracy as when I enable skeleton overlayer script which perfectly match my bone strucuture… I want to get same effect as http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksKxN6aVg6s
    Do you have any recommendation?
    Rgds.

    • Hi Oscar, the developer on this video has used one of the fitting room demo scenes as a basis of his system. So, it is possible.
      To your issue: I would start with the AssetScaler-component of the overlay model. Set its ‘Body scale factor’ to 1 and the rest scale-factors to 0. Start adjusting the body scale factor to match your body, as good as possible. Then, if needed, use the other scale factors – for arms and legs – to get the best cover of the limbs.

  17. Hello Rumen,

    I am working on a dance demo where two player can dance same time, I want to display usermap for both player. Everything is working awesome but I didn’t find how can i display different usermap or color map for both user in scene on different screen cord.

    • Hi, unfortunately there are no separate textures for the different users in K2-asset. If you need them anyway, I would suggest to create these textures separately with the help of the current shader and the body index map. If you need more info regarding this, please e-mail me and mention your invoice number, as well.

  18. Hello Rumen,
    I am using Avatar Controller and Avatar Scalar components for 3d clothes, Is it possible to use 2d image of clothes using same components or any other tips to create fitting room using 2d images.

  19. Hi Rumen,

    Thanks for this amazing demo! Can I ask some questions about the KinectRecorderDemo? I understand that the user’s motion data will be saved in a file in the ‘Recording’ mode and the file will be used to control the cubeman in the ‘Playing’ mode. I noticed that only the joint positions (x, y, z) are saved in the file (the joint orientations are not saved) . But in CubemanController.cs, you are still using ‘manager.GetJointOrientation()’ to get the joint orientations. Where does the orientation info come from in the ‘Playing’ mode? Or is it useless for the cubeman? Thanks!

      • Hi Rumen, thanks for the reply! If I also need the record and play mode for the avatar (instead of the cubemen), can I use the same function (manager.SetBodyFrameData() and manager.GetBodyFrameData()) in the AvatarController.cs? I found that you use different methods (like kinectManager.GetJointOrientation()) in AvatarController.cs.

      • Actually, what you need to do is just add a KinectRecorderPlayer-script as component to the KinectController-object in the scene, set the path to the recording-file and enable ‘Play at start’. All the rest will be done automatically. You don’t need to modify the low level calls to KinectManager.

      • Hi Rumen, can I ask you a follow-up question on this? For the KinectRecorderDemo, is it possible for me to create two Cubemen/avatars, one in recording mode and the other one in playing mode? I find that for the kinectManager, we need to set the ‘playMode’ as true or false. So the kinectManager will read data from either Kinect or the file. Is it possible to enable both the recording and playing mode (for two avatars) at the same time? Thanks in advance.

      • Yes, I think it is possible but would need some coding. In the respective AvatarController or CubemanController you would need to check if the current KM play-mode is on or off and compare it with some setting. If the play mode matches the setting – do the movements. If not – skip them altogether. Hope this tip helps a bit.

  20. Hello Rumen,
    Can you please answer my last post about 2D fitting.
    Also while testing fitting room demo I changed 3D model used there(jeans) after setting everything jeans fit on me but while testing on my colleague it gets distorted our height is same, Do you have any idea for possible solution

    • Hi again, please first make sure that the ‘Continuous scaling’-setting of the respective ModelSelector-component is enabled. If the issue persists, please e-mail me and send me some screenshots of the jeans. I’d like to see how they look normal on you and distorted on your colleague. This may give me some idea.

      • Hi thanks for the reply.I will send you email with screenshots and invoice. Also,I am not using model selector component on 3D clothes model. I created a new scene added avatar controller and avatar scalar component on it. There is no issue for upper wear(Tshirts) but in lower wear’s(jeans,pants) sometimes models get distorted. Is modelselector component necessary to use while creating fitting room ?

      • If you have AvatarController & AvatarScaler added to the model, then you don’t need to have ModelSelector in that scene. ModelSelector (in FR-demo1) automates adding of these components to the models for you. In your case ‘Continuous scaling’ is a setting of the AvatarScaler-component. And because the leg & feet joints are detected with more errors in comparison to arms and torso, enabling continuous scaling would be better.

      • Thanks or the reply another small query one of my colleague’s height is 6 ft 2 inch and kinect cant detect him properly only solution was to place kinect higher from the user’s height to detect him Is there any other solution ? Can you tell me at what height kinect should be placed so users with different height could get easily detected ?

      • I usually place the sensor at about 1 meter above the ground, but it depends on the setup. In this regard, what is your setup and why your colleague can’t be detected? This is a rare case, according to my experience. Also, don’t forget to set the ‘Sensor height’ and ‘Sensor angle’ settings of KinectManager properly, after you change the sensor’s position or rotation. See this tip: https://rfilkov.com/2015/01/25/kinect-v2-tips-tricks-examples/#t13

  21. Hello.
    I’m using the sauce well.

    The project I’m working on is going to have to use two kinetic sensors.

    It is not necessary to use two kinetic sensors at the same time, but
    I want to use the kinetic sensor that I want in the scene of my choice. Is it possible?

  22. Hi Rumen,

    Congratulations for this incredible project it is indeed amazing.
    Sorry I seem to have an issue with the CloudFaceController-game object of the KinectFittingRoom1-demo scene . It’s just not there it’s missing from the Hierarchy I’ve tried to reimport the project but still not there. I would really appreciate some help please.I am using Unity 2019.2.9f1. Apart from this everything else is brilliant and works perfect Thanks

    • Hi Nikolay, here is how CloudFaceController-game object looks in my FR1-scene. The components can be found in KinectDemos/FittingRoomDemo/Scripts/CloudFaceScripts-folder. Please also note you don’t need these components for the demo scene to run. The advantage is that they could provide gender and age recognition, hence a basic filtering for the clothing models, for the current user.

      CloudFaceController

  23. Hi Rumen,

    In the KinectFittingRoom1-demo scene,I want to use the handright bone point to interact with the UI, but I get the position of handright. It’s not displayed correctly in the UI. It’s always on the left side of the hand .Can you give me some advice?

      • hi Rumen,

        I have a new problem. When I am tracking hand joints, the joints of the hand are shaking all the time. I try to adjust the smoothing of KinectManager, but it looks like it has not changed

  24. Pingback: Azure Kinect Tips & Tricks | RF Solutions - Technology, Health and More

  25. Hi Rumen,
    I’ve been using this asset for a while now and was wondering if there’s any way to capture the depth sensor disconnection?, say i.e. disconnected from the usb.

    Thanks in advance.

    • Hi, there will be a new component in the next release, called KinectEventManager. Among other events, it will provide OnSensorDisconnect event, as well.

  26. HI Rumen,

    I have a question how do we remove all the models from the users body in the FITTINGROOMDEMO1 while we use the KEEP SELECTED MODEL.

    In other words after putting all the models on the body how can we remove all the models from the body?

    • Hi, find all ModelSelector-components in the scene and for each of them call their respective DestroySelectedModel()-method. I think that should be enough.

  27. HI Rumen,

    First of all, I’m sorry for using the translator because I’m not good at Using English.
    I created a game project by Unity, thanks to the Kinect V-2 SDK. And I’ve been using the game for months. However, This Kinect Game has Some Problem Now. Kinect Tracking is Not Working, and the Unity project was shut down suddenly. The project that worked well at first does not work well now. Is there a fucntion that data will automatically store when tracking the user in the SDK? If so, I would like to ask how to initialize it.

    Thanks

    • Hi JsPark, I suppose something has happened to that machine recently and ultimately caused the crash. Please look at the Unity log-file (either Editor or Player, depending on whether the crash happens in Unity editor or in the exe file). Here is where to find the Unity log-files: https://docs.unity3d.com/Manual/LogFiles.html

      To store the data of the tracked users at runtime, you could utilize the KinectRecorderPlayer-component. See KinectRecorderDemo-scene in KinectDemos/RecorderDemo-folder, if you need an example on how to use it.

  28. HI Rumen,

    JsPark Again, I have one more question. In Kinect v2 we built a portrait project in landscape mode. But what is detected on the screen is the entire landscape mode. Is there a function to track only the vertical range as seen on the screen?

    Thanks

      • Thanks for reply.
        I’m sorry, but it seems to me that the meaning was wrong.
        I apologize once again for using the translator.
        I did that portrait way. And I got a portrait screen. But my Kinect still seems to be tracking the whole off vertical screen. That’s why it’s a mess to track people out of the screen.

        That’s my problem. Can I adjust the width(?) of Detecting so that I can only detect people on my screen?

        Thanks

      • You can adjust ‘Max left right distance’ from the sensor, in meters. It’s a setting of the KinectManager-component in the scene. A value of 0 means there is no left or right limit.
        Hope I understood your question correctly this time.

  29. Hello Rumen,

    We are having issues with running the KinectFaceTrackingDemo3, specifically the SetFaceTexture throwing a “NullReferenceException: Object reference not set to an instance of an object
    SetFaceTexture.Update () (at Assets/KinectDemos/FaceTrackingDemo/Scripts/SetFaceTexture.cs:152)”.
    Attempting to rearrange the conditional logic to make sure it doesn’t request the color map when it’s supposed to use the background removal output, it just paints the quad with a solid color or with the whole color image captured by kinect.

    Any help at all would be appreciated.
    Thanks in advance.

    • Hi, I suppose you have modified SetFaceTexture.cs, or your version of the K2-asset is a bit outdated. On line 152 I have only ‘{‘. In this regard, please update to the latest version of the K2-asset (v2.19.2) and if the issue persists, please e-mail me and attach SetFaceTexture.cs and some screenshots, so I can understand the problem better.

  30. Hello Rumen,
    I use the “KinectFaceTrackingDemo3” and I want to develop it for more player (more player, more face tracking)
    Can you give me some advice?

    Thanks in advance.

    • Hi, as almost all Kinect-related components, the SetFaceTexture-component in this scene has a ‘Player index’-setting. If you duplicate it, change its Player index and reference some other FaceView, I think you should get more than one face tracked in this scene.

      • Thank for reply.
        I can’t see ‘Player Index’-setting in ‘SetFaceTexture-component’, It is only one in ‘FaceTrackingManager Component’.
        link : https://ibb.co/wWsXPhv

        ..If I set ‘Player index’ to 0, It’s tracking 1st Player only
        ..If I set ‘Player index’ to 1, It’s tracking 2nd Player only
        How can I edit component to tracking more player at the same time?

        I’m trying to edit my project, This is how i do But still unsuccessful
        link :
        https://ibb.co/PZ60Gv4
        https://ibb.co/CWFjLFd
        https://ibb.co/YX5nwB4

        – Create new game object ‘FaceView2’ (new game object, new material) to tracking 2nd Player.
        – Add ‘TargetObject2’ into ‘SetFaceTexture-component’ and put game object ‘FaceView2’ into this component.
        – Add ‘Player index2’ into ‘FaceTrackingManager Component’ and set it to 1 (*I add only ‘Player index2’ but not edit in script detail)

        ..It’s unsuccessful. ^ ^”
        Give me some advice please.

        Thanks in advance.

      • I suppose your version of the K2-asset is very, very old. Look at the image below.
        In this regard, my first advice would be to update your asset from the Asset store to the latest version (v2.19.2). It’s free of any charge.
        Then you can duplicate the SetFaceTexture-component in the scene and change its player index, to track more users.

        SetFaceTexture settings

    • Hi again. This is due to the mapping of the depth camera image to the color camera image. The depth camera just doesn’t “see” these edges on the right and left. That’s why you get them there. Unfortunately, we cannot do much about this.

  31. Hello Rumen,
    I am developing kinect v2 gesture based game.
    I want to accurately identify people sit in the air (such as: swing), but when the hand held high overhead on both sides of the rope, it will identify the rope into the character’s hand;When hands crossed in overhead, model recognition will be completely warped.Is there a good way to identify or advice?

    • Sorry, but I don’t quite understand what you mean. Could you be more specific? Please feel free to e-mail me, with more details and some pictures, so I can understand your issue.

  32. Hi Rumen, cubeman0 is draw when recreating a recordign from textfile. Is it possiblt to skin this skeleton with a model made with blender with the format .xbf, if so how? My model appears on the scene aswell as the existing skeleton, but does not move it just remains in a t-pose.

    • Hi, first please look at this tip above: https://rfilkov.com/2015/01/25/kinect-v2-tips-tricks-examples/#t3

      The KinectRecorderPlayer-component records or replays the body data of all tracked users. If you copy the KinectRecorderPlayer-component from KinectRecorderDemo-scene to the KinectController-game object in one of the avatar demo-scenes (or any other scene), and enable its ‘Play at start’-setting, this should be enough to replay the saved body data recording in that scene.

      Hope I understood your issue correctly.

    • Please look at the 4th face-tracking demo scene. To export the mocap to a FBX file, you would need to utilize the FBX SDK. But this is beyond the scope of my humble Unity assets.

  33. I have a special requirement, there are two Kinect V1 sensors connected to the computer at the same time, Unity specifies the Kinect Index connection (Unity only connects one).
    I checked the Kinect SDK C#.
    But in “Kinect with MS-SDK” or “Kinect v2 Examples with MS-SDK and Nuitrack SDK” how to modify the code to achieve this function.
    Can you provide suggestions?
    Thank you !
    Sorry my English is not a native language.

  34. -Unity 2018.4.0f1
    -Windows10

    Kinect v2 is disconnected very frequently on certain computers and then reconnected. (The Kinect v2 camera goes off and on again.)

    Is there any reason to guess?

    • This sounds like a hardware issue. Please run the ‘Kinect configuration verifier’ (part of ‘SDK Browser v2.0’), to check what exactly may not be OK in your case. The issue I’ve seen most often is USB port incompatibility. It should be USB 3.0 and not USB 3.1 or later, as far as I remember. The Windows version is not the reason for issues. Kinect-v2 works fine on Windows 10, as well.

      • As you said, I ran ‘Kinect configuration verifier’ and confirmed that Connected was constantly disconnected every 5 seconds.

        Kinect itself seems to be the problem.

        Also, as you said in ‘Kinect configuration verifier’, the yellow light on the USB port is lit.

        If it is lit yellow, do you need to purchase another compatible USB port?

      • FYI: There is almost always yellow light next to the USB port. This is because originally Kinect-v2 supported very few models of USB 3.0 ports. As far as I remember, it was mainly Renesas. But as long as it works and you see the depth and color streams, it should be OK.

      • I will record another doubt here.

        1. Causes of the USB chipset
        The PC spec that caused the problem was a USB 3.0 port.
        However, the chipset is AMD, not Intel.

        2. Causes of outlet power
        I think the problem occurred after connecting a large amount of power to the same outlet as Kinect. Before that, it worked fine without problems. The problem is that the same symptoms persist even after removing the additional power sources.

        Please let me know if there are any other suspected causes.

        Thank you for always.

      • #2 sounds interesting. I have not seen it before, but it is possible. You could connect the sensor to a different outlet and then try again.

  35. Surprisingly, it is doing very well on other computers.

    The characteristic of a computer that is frequently disconnected is that it has a very high-end CPU, so it only has an internal graphics card and no external graphics card.
    (Mysteriously, I used it well for a month, but after a month, sudden disconnection occurs frequently.)

    The same symptoms are occurring on Samsung’s latest high-end laptops. (Notebook with GTX1060)

    All are Windows 10 environments.
    Should I use Windows 8,

    If there is a cause, guess, please tell me.

  36. Hello. I’m working with Nuitrack SDK and can’t Initialize NuitrackInterface. Does Nuitrack works with Kinect v2 on K2Examples? Should i add nuitrack libraries manually?

  37. Hi Rumen.

    I want to try the orbbec stereo s3 u, as is supported within nuitrack. But when trying to run a demo, I get error of initialization… any idea???

    • Hi, please first check if this sensor works with Nuitrack. If not, you may need to upgrade to a newer Nuitrack version. If it works with Nuitrack, it should work with the NuitrackInterface in the K2-asset, as well.

  38. Hello Rumen.

    Do you have a suggestion for how to control a humanoid character with the Avatar Controller and the Rig Builder? (from Animation Rigging package)

    Regards,

  39. Hello Rumen, could you please help me with the “InteractionDemo” solution.

    So, I grab the object, move it around and when I drop/release it, I’d like the object to continue its “dynamic” way in the dragging direction instead of being static again.
    Is there any “simplified” solution for this. Thank you!

  40. Just to add to the previous question:

    Something like your “PhysicsDemo” but with ability to choose which object to pick.

    Regards, A.

    • You should get the 3D positions of your dragging hand, when you start dragging the object and when you stop dragging it, as well as the times. dD/dT^2 should give you the acceleration while dragging the object, in 3D. As far as I remember, (mass * acceleration) gives you the force that you need to apply to the object along with gravity, to make it dynamic (i.e. obey to the physics rules).

  41. Hi Rumen
    There is a parameter “Max Left Right Distance” in the KinectManager script, which means whether to set the left and right distance of the camera to see the screen, and the combination of “min/max User distance” is to set the FOV of the camera.

    • “Max left right” is how many meters left and right to the camera a user should be detected. This may be useful in crowded places, where you should ignore the people out of some space. It has nothing to do with the screen or camera streams.

  42. Hi Rumen,

    This package is excellent. One issue I am having though is that when using the “Universal Render Pipeline”, I can’t seem to get the UserBodyBlender script to display correctly. It seems to display a blue screen instead of the camera texture. In other demos, I’ve worked around this by switching background type from “Solid Color” to “Uninitialized” but the UserBodyBlender seems to automatically make the environment type “Solid Color”. Any help to address this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!

    • Hi Max,
      Yes, the UserBodyBlender doesn’t work with HDRP & URP. The reason is that OnRenderImage() is not supported on these pipelines. The simple workaround is just to disable the UserBodyBlender-component in the scene. There is also an alternative I’ve provided in the K4A-asset (it works with Kinect-v2, too). If you’d like to try it, please e-mail me and I’ll send it to you.

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