Monday, May 13, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Cameras that sync with one another to track suspects

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Nov, 2014 10:41 AM
  • Cameras that sync with one another to track suspects
Electrical engineers from the University of Washington in the Us have developed a way to automatically track people across moving and still cameras by using a technology that trains the networked cameras to learn one another's differences.
 
The cameras first identify a person in a video frame then follow that same person across multiple camera views.
 
The linking technology can be used anywhere as long as the cameras can talk over a wireless network and upload data to the cloud.
 
This detailed visual record could be useful for security and surveillance, monitoring for unusual behaviour or tracking a moving suspect.
 
"Tracking humans automatically across cameras in a 3D space is new. As the cameras talk to each other, we are able to describe the real world in a more dynamic sense," said Jenq-Neng Hwang, lead researcher and professor of electrical engineering.
 
The tracking system first systematically picks out people in a camera frame, then follows each person based on his or her clothing texture, colour and body movement.
 
An algorithm automatically applies those differences between cameras and can pick out the same people across multiple frames, effectively tracking them without needing to see their faces.
 
With the new technology, a car with a mounted camera could take a video of a scene, then identify and track humans and overlay them into the virtual 3D map on your GPS screen.
 
"Our idea is to enable the dynamic visualisation of the realistic situation of humans walking on the road and sidewalks, so eventually people can see the animated version of the real-time dynamics of city streets on a platform like Google Earth," Hwang added.
 
The researchers are developing this to work in real time. This could help pick out people crossing busy intersections or track a specific person who is dodging the police.
 
They also installed the tracking system on cameras placed inside a robot and a flying drone, allowing the robot and drone to follow a person, even when the cameras came across obstacles that blocked the person from view.
 
Hwang and his research team presented the results at the "Intelligent Transportation Systems Conference" in Qingdao, China, recently.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

'Selfie' to cure skin problems

'Selfie' to cure skin problems
If you have a skin problem, taking a selfie of the affected area and sending it to your dermatologist for analysis is a good idea....

'Selfie' to cure skin problems

Facebook pushing kids to hop onto junk foodwagon: Study

Facebook pushing kids to hop onto junk foodwagon: Study
If your growing kid cannot think beyond junk food like burgers or pizza to satiate his/her hunger pangs, blame Facebook....

Facebook pushing kids to hop onto junk foodwagon: Study

In tech-era, parent-child relationship blooms on multiple channels

In tech-era, parent-child relationship blooms on multiple channels
Calling home may not be enough, nowadays, to maintain an adequate parent-kid relationship in the era of technology, as connecting via multiple...

In tech-era, parent-child relationship blooms on multiple channels

App for fitness freaks to stay motivated

App for fitness freaks to stay motivated
Jog and earn a free cupcake! Now, a new software application launched here Monday helps fitness freaks to stay motivated by earning...

App for fitness freaks to stay motivated

Stop creating fake profiles to nab criminals: Facebook

Stop creating fake profiles to nab criminals: Facebook
Social networking site Facebook has asked the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to desist from creating fake profiles to nab criminals....

Stop creating fake profiles to nab criminals: Facebook

People enjoy tweets they did not ask for: Twitter

People enjoy tweets they did not ask for: Twitter
Do you enjoy tweets that land in your account from people you do not follow? A latest experiment from the micro-blogging site revealed....

People enjoy tweets they did not ask for: Twitter