Into the woods: Visual surveillance of noncooperative and camouflaged targets in complex outdoor settings

被引:103
作者
Boult, TE [1 ]
Micheals, RJ [1 ]
Gao, X [1 ]
Eckmann, M [1 ]
机构
[1] Lehigh Univ, VAST Lab, Bethlehem, PA 18015 USA
关键词
adaptive signal processing; connected components; hysteresis; image motion analysis; image sequence analysis; omnidirectional video; real-time systems; TV surveillance systems;
D O I
10.1109/5.959337
中图分类号
TM [电工技术]; TN [电子技术、通信技术];
学科分类号
0808 ; 0809 ;
摘要
Autonomous video surveillance and monitoring of human subjects in video has a rich history. Many deployed systems are able to reliability track human motion in indoor and controlled outdoor environments, e.g., parking lots and university campuses. A challenging domain of vital military importance is the surveillance of noncooperative and camouflaged targets within cluttered outdoor settings. These situations require both sensitivity and a very wide field of view and, therefore, are a natural application of onmidirectional video. Fundamentally, target finding is a change detection problem. Detection of camouflaged and adversarial targets implies the need for extreme sensitivity. Unfortunately, blind change detection in woods and fields may lead to a high fraction of false alarms, since natural scene motion and lighting changes produce highly dynamic scenes. Naturally, this desire for high sensitivity leads to a direct,tradeoff between miss detections and false alarms. This paper discusses the current state of the art in video-based target detection, including an analysis of background adaptation techniques. The primary focus of the paper is the Lehigh Omnidirectional Tracking System (LOTS) and its components. This includes adaptive multibackground modeling, quasi-connected components (a novel approach to, spatio-temporal grouping), background subtraction analyses; and an overall system evaluation.
引用
收藏
页码:1382 / 1402
页数:21
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