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La-Fabrik/docs/technical/hand-tracking.md
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Tom Boullay bbae199105 docs(handtracking): document SVG-primary path and isFist origin
Reflect the current runtime in docs/technical/hand-tracking.md:

- SVG visualizer is now the primary hand UI; the 3D glove is opt-in
  via the Show Model debug toggle.
- Reorder the runtime flow to put HandTrackingVisualizer before
  HandTrackingGlove and make explicit that grab, fist detection, SVG
  and optional 3D glove are independent consumers of the same
  landmark snapshot.
- New Fist Detection section showing how isFist() in
  browserHandTracking.ts derives the flag from landmarks alone (palm
  centroid + 4 fingertip distances), and confirming GrabbableObject
  reads that flag directly - no glove involvement.
- Describe the SVG visualizer styling and the feMorphology outline
  trick.
- Mark HandTrackingFallback and the gant_l/_pad assets as legacy in
  the limitations list.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-03 00:42:14 +02:00

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Hand Tracking Technical Notes

This document describes the hand tracking system that exists in the current codebase.

Purpose

Hand tracking started as a debug-stage interaction system used to test direct 3D object manipulation with a webcam. It allows a user to close their fist to grab a nearby object and move it in 3D space without relying on the center crosshair.

It is now also available to the production repair flow when a mission reaches a hand-driven step.

Runtime Flow

The frontend can run hand tracking with two interchangeable sources, selected from the debug source controller:

  • Browser JS (src/hooks/handTracking/useBrowserHandTracking.ts) runs MediaPipe hand_landmarker.task directly in the browser via @mediapipe/tasks-vision. Default for debug.
  • Backend (src/hooks/handTracking/useRemoteHandTracking.ts) sends webcam frames as JPEG over WebSocket to a local Python process that runs MediaPipe and returns landmarks.

Both sources funnel into the same HandTrackingContext so all consumers see one shared snapshot:

  1. The active source captures or receives landmarks.
  2. The hook applies an EMA smoothing pass on the landmarks before publishing the snapshot.
  3. HandTrackingProvider exposes that snapshot through React context.
  4. GrabbableObject reads the snapshot each frame and uses hand.isFist plus raycasting to grab objects.
  5. HandTrackingVisualizer paints the SVG hand silhouette overlay on top of the canvas — the primary visualization.
  6. HandTrackingGlove (opt-in, see UI And Debug) places a rigged 3D glove on each detected hand when enabled via the debug toggle.

All consumers — fist detection, grab raycasting, SVG silhouette, optional 3D glove — read the same landmarks from the snapshot. None of them depend on the others.

Activation Rules

Hand tracking is gated so the webcam and runtime are only spun up when actually needed.

The debug activation conditions are:

  • debug mode is active with ?debug
  • scene mode is physics
  • the player is near an interaction, is holding an object, or is hand-holding an object

The production repair activation conditions are:

  • active mainState is ebike, pylon, or farm
  • the active mission step is inspected, repairing, reassembling, or done

This keeps the webcam off during waiting, fragmented, and scanning.

Linger

Once activation turns off (player walks back out of a trigger zone, or a mission step transitions away), the runtime stays alive for HAND_TRACKING_LINGER_MS (2000 ms) before being torn down. This gives MediaPipe enough time to finish initializing the webcam and load the model on a fresh entry — without the linger, a quick walk-through of a trigger zone never produces a detected hand.

Provider Stability

HandTrackingProvider always renders the same JSX root (HandTrackingRuntime) and exposes enabled as a prop. Returning two different element types (<HandTrackingContext value=IDLE> vs <ActiveHandTrackingProvider>) used to be the historical shape and was the root cause of WebGL context loss: every enabled toggle forced React to remount the entire subtree, including the <Canvas>, which destroyed the WebGL renderer.

The two source hooks are therefore mounted in permanence with an enabled flag that they early-return on. No webcam or MediaPipe resources are created while enabled is false.

StrictMode Resilience

In development, <StrictMode> mounts → unmounts → remounts each effect to surface non-idempotent code. The two source hooks delay their actual start() call by HAND_TRACKING_RUNTIME_START_DELAY_MS (80 ms) and clear the timer on cleanup, so a StrictMode double-mount or a rapid nearby flicker never reaches getUserMedia twice.

Backend

The backend lives in backend/ and exposes:

  • GET /health for health checks
  • WS /ws for frame input and hand tracking output

The Python process uses MediaPipe and the local model file:

backend/hand_landmarker.task

The frontend sends JPEG frames at HAND_TRACKING_FRAME_WIDTH × HAND_TRACKING_FRAME_HEIGHT (320×240) to keep WebSocket bandwidth low. The backend sends normalized hand coordinates and landmarks.

Browser MediaPipe

The browser path uses hand_landmarker.task (float16) downloaded from Google's MediaPipe model storage. The requested webcam resolution is 640×480 (HAND_TRACKING_BROWSER_CAMERA_WIDTH/HEIGHT), independent from the backend's 320×240. The float16 model is more sensitive than the backend Python model and needs the higher-resolution frame to detect hands reliably.

The MediaPipe delegate is currently "GPU". CPU works too but is significantly slower; on a loaded scene the inference drops to ~5fps and the user feels noticeable lag during grab. MediaPipe creates its own WebGL context separate from Three.js, so there is no direct contention.

A singleton instance of HandLandmarker is cached in src/lib/handTracking/browserHandTracking.ts. releaseBrowserHandLandmarker() is called on cleanup and on WebGL context lost.

Smoothing

MediaPipe at ~10 fps produces noticeable landmark jitter that, when fed raw into the scene, makes both the glove rig and any grabbed object tremble.

A simple exponential moving average is applied to every landmark before the snapshot is published:

smoothed.x = previous.x * (1 - factor) + next.x * factor;

The factor is HAND_TRACKING_LANDMARK_SMOOTHING (0.4). Hands are matched across frames by handedness so left/right don't bleed into each other.

Frontend Data Shape

The shared types live in src/types/handTracking/handTracking.ts.

interface HandTrackingHand {
  x: number;
  y: number;
  z: number;
  landmarks: HandTrackingLandmark[];
  handedness: string;
  isFist: boolean;
  score: number;
}

x and y are normalized camera coordinates. z is a relative depth value from MediaPipe, not an absolute world-space distance.

Fist Detection

isFist is computed in src/lib/handTracking/browserHandTracking.ts (isFist() function) from landmarks alone — no model, no glove. The check is:

  1. Palm center = mean of landmarks [0, 5, 9, 13, 17] (wrist + 4 MCPs).
  2. Palm size = distance from wrist (landmark 0) to middle MCP (landmark 9).
  3. For each of the four fingertip landmarks [8, 12, 16, 20], check whether its distance to the palm center is less than 1.05 × palmSize.
  4. isFist === true iff all four fingertips pass the check.

The flag is attached to each hand on the snapshot at the publish step (isFist: isFist(normalizedLandmarks)) and read directly by GrabbableObject.tsx — the SVG visualizer and the 3D glove never participate in the gesture decision.

Grab Targeting

The hand grab logic lives in src/components/three/interaction/GrabbableObject.tsx.

The object is moved toward the visual center of the hand. That center is computed from the bounding box of all landmarks:

centerX = (minX + maxX) / 2
centerY = (minY + maxY) / 2

Starting a grab uses a slightly wider virtual hit zone. Instead of raycasting only from one point, the code casts several rays around the hand center:

  • center
  • left
  • right
  • up
  • down

If any ray hits the object while the object is within INTERACTION_RADIUS, the object enters hand-holding mode.

Depth Handling

Because MediaPipe z is relative and noisy, the current frontend does not use it as a direct world-depth controller for object grabbing.

Instead, GrabbableObject computes a ray from the 2D hand center and moves the object toward a configurable hold distance in front of the active camera. That hold distance is shared with the mouse grab path and can be tuned in the debug GUI.

This is less expressive than true depth-aware hand movement, but it is more stable for the current first-person prototype.

UI And Debug

The current debug UI includes:

  • HandTrackingDebugPanel inside DebugOverlayLayout for status, usage, loaded glove model, server state, hand count, and fist state
  • HandTrackingVisualizer for the SVG hand silhouette overlay (always on when tracking is active)
  • HandTrackingFallback for the last-resort hand silhouette overlay (legacy, see below)
  • HandTrackingGlove for the per-hand rigged glove models in the R3F scene, opt-in via the Show Model toggle
  • r3f-perf for render performance
  • lil-gui for scene, camera, lighting, interaction, and grab controls

SVG Visualizer

HandTrackingVisualizer is the primary hand visualization. It draws a light-blue hand silhouette with a crisp dark-blue outline by:

  1. Filling a palm polygon (landmarks [1, 5, 9, 13, 17] plus two synthetic wrist corners) and five finger tubes (thick rounded stroke along each finger's joint chain).
  2. Wrapping the whole thing in an SVG <filter> that uses feMorphology to dilate the merged alpha by 2 px and subtract the original, producing a single continuous outline around the union — no internal seams where the palm and finger tubes overlap.
  3. Shrinking every landmark toward the hand centroid by RENDER_SCALE = 0.65 so the silhouette stays compact and doesn't dominate the screen.
  4. Overlaying the 21 raw landmarks and 21 bones as faint translucent lines and dots, so the user can still see the MediaPipe data feeding the silhouette.

The SVG only displays when MediaPipe is active and the debug Show Model toggle is off (default). When the toggle is on, the SVG hides and HandTrackingGlove takes over.

Show Model Toggle

The Hand Tracking debug folder exposes a single visualization switch:

  • showHandTrackingModel = false (default): SVG visualizer renders, 3D glove is not mounted at all.
  • showHandTrackingModel = true: SVG visualizer hides, 3D glove gets mounted for the detected hand(s).

The 3D glove is treated as opt-in legacy because it had bugs (WebGL context loss, finger rig artefacts) and its hit/grab role was never load-bearing — grab has always read landmarks directly.

Fallback Overlay (legacy)

HandTrackingFallback draws a simple open-hand or fist silhouette positioned on the detected wrist landmark. It renders for any hand whose glove is in the "error" state in useHandTrackingGloveStatus. Now that the glove is opt-in and rarely mounted, the fallback effectively only fires in the rare case where the user enables showHandTrackingModel and the glove fails to load. It is kept on disk for that edge case but is not part of the default visual path.

Glove Models

The 3D glove is opt-in via the Show Model debug toggle (see UI And Debug). It is not mounted by default; the SVG visualizer is the primary hand UI. The information below applies only when the toggle is enabled.

HandTrackingGlove loads public/models/gant_l/model.gltf for both hands. The right hand applies scale.x = -1 at the group level to mirror the mesh, so the thumb ends up on the correct side. Both hands therefore share the same rig and the same material.

The historical public/models/gant_r/model.gltf is kept as legacy but is not loaded by the frontend — its GLB embeds three skeletons (Hand_l, Hand_l_pad, Hand_r) plus a galet mesh, which made the finger rig unreliable.

The gant_l material is set to alphaMode: OPAQUE with doubleSided: true. The opaque mode prevents transparency sorting issues that made folded fingers disappear behind the palm; the double-sided flag covers the back faces revealed by the mirror scale on the right hand.

Two additional glove variants exist on disk:

  • public/models/gant_l_pad/model.gltf
  • public/models/gant_r_pad/model.gltf

They are intended for future swap-by-state usage but are not yet rigged. They cannot be animated by MediaPipe landmarks in their current form — re-exporting them from Blender with the same armature structure as gant_l is a prerequisite.

Known Limitations

  • Production usage is currently limited to repair mission steps that explicitly need hands.
  • MediaPipe depth is relative and currently not used for stable object depth control.
  • The virtual hit zone is an approximation based on multiple raycasts, not a real 3D collider.
  • The 3D glove is opt-in only (see Show Model toggle). Default visual is the SVG silhouette.
  • HandTrackingFallback is legacy and effectively unused unless the glove toggle is enabled and the glove fails to load.
  • The right glove is a mirrored copy of gant_l rather than its own mesh; in the future a dedicated right-hand model would give a better visual.
  • The _pad glove variants are not rigged yet, so swap-by-state (normal ↔ pad) is not wired in.
  • Finger bone animation is an approximate landmark-to-bone mapping; it still needs calibration for per-model twist, offsets, and smoothing.