Thursday, March 26, 2026
ADVT 
Tech

Researchers At Carnegie Mellon University Develop Video System To Locate Mass Shooters Using Smartphones

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Nov, 2019 07:41 PM

    Researchers have developed a system that can accurately locate a shooter based on video recordings from as few as three smartphones.


    The system, called Video Event Reconstruction and Analysis (VERA), won't necessarily replace the commercial microphone arrays for locating shooters that public safety officials already use, although it may be a useful supplement for public safety when commercial arrays aren't available.


    "One key motivation for assembling VERA was to create a tool that could be used by human rights workers and journalists who investigate war crimes, terrorist acts and human rights violations," study researcher Alexander Hauptmann from Carnegie Mellon University in the US.

     


    When demonstrated using three video recordings from the 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas that left 58 people dead and hundreds wounded, the system correctly estimated the shooter's actual location -- the north wing of the Mandalay Bay hotel.


    The estimate was based on three gunshots fired within the first minute of what would be a prolonged massacre.


    VERA uses machine learning techniques to synchronise the video feeds and calculate the position of each camera based on what that camera is seeing.


    "But it's the audio from the video feeds that's pivotal in localising the source of the gunshots," Hauptmann said.


    Specifically, the system looks at the time delay between the crack caused by a supersonic bullet's shock wave and the muzzle blast, which travels at the speed of sound.


    It also uses audio to identify the type of gun used, which determines bullet speed.


    VERA can then calculate the shooter's distance from the smartphone.


    "When we began, we didn't think you could detect the crack with a smartphone because it's really short," Hauptmann said.


    "But it turns out today's cell phone microphones are pretty good," Hauptmann added.


    By using video from three or more smartphones, the direction from which the shots were fired -- and the shooter's location -- can be calculated based on the differences in how long it takes the muzzle blast to reach each camera.


    VERA is not limited to detecting gunshots.


    "It is an event analysis system that can be used to locate a variety of other sounds relevant to human rights and war crimes investigations," Hauptmann said.


    The researchers presented VERA and released it as open-source code at the Association for Computing Machinery's International Conference on Multimedia in Nice, France.

     

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Review: Is Amazon's Ultra-cheap $134 Fire HD 6 Tablet Any Good?

    Review: Is Amazon's Ultra-cheap $134 Fire HD 6 Tablet Any Good?
    TORONTO - At first glance, Amazon's new Fire HD 6 tablet looks like something you would not want to buy. The six-inch screen seems tiny compared to the display on a full-size iPad. It even makes the iPad mini look pretty large.

    Review: Is Amazon's Ultra-cheap $134 Fire HD 6 Tablet Any Good?

    Are you sleeping with your smartphone?

    Are you sleeping with your smartphone?
    A considerable number of people take their smartphones with them to bed - some even holding them in their hands as they dream, said a survey.

    Are you sleeping with your smartphone?

    Phone call data can accurately map population

    Phone call data can accurately map population
    Population maps based on anonymous mobile phone call record data can be as accurate as those based on censuses, finds research....

    Phone call data can accurately map population

    Now, an app for car-sharing

    Now, an app for car-sharing
    Car sharing in Colombia is becoming easier with an app created by the Fuimonos company that can be used on computers and smart phone...

    Now, an app for car-sharing

    Windowless Plane That Lets Passengers See All Around Them To Take Off In A Decade

    Windowless Plane That Lets Passengers See All Around Them To Take Off In A Decade
    Imagine flying in a plane sans windows! Your imagination may soon become a reality with a British company working on such a plane....

    Windowless Plane That Lets Passengers See All Around Them To Take Off In A Decade

    Google offers free access to satellite images

    Google offers free access to satellite images
    Tracking melting glaciers, deforestation or disappearing elephants has been made easier as Google has now allowed access to real time, updated...

    Google offers free access to satellite images