6,167 research outputs found

    Comparison of background subtraction techniques under sudden illumination changes

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    This paper investigates three background modelling techniques that have potential to be robust against sudden and gradual illumination changes for a single, stationary camera. The first makes use of a modified local binary pattern that considers both spatial texture and colour information. The second uses a combination of a frame-based Gaussianity Test and a pixel-based Shading Model to handle sudden illumination changes. The third solution is an extension of a popular kernel density estimation (KDE) technique from the temporal to spatio-temporal domain using 9-dimensional data points instead of pixel intensity values and a discrete hyperspherical kernel instead of a Gaussian kernel. A number of experiments were performed to provide a com- parison of these techniques in regard to classfication accuracy

    A region based approach to background modeling in a wavelet multi-resolution framework

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    In the field of detection and monitoring of dynamic objects in quasi-static scenes, background subtraction techniques where background is modeled at pixel-level, although showing very significant limitations, are extensively used. In this work we propose a novel approach to background modeling that operates at region-level in a wavelet based multi-resolution framework. Based on a segmentation of the background, characterization is made for each region independently as a mixture of K Gaussian modes, considering the model of the approximation and detail coefficients at the different wavelet decomposition levels. Background region characterization is updated along time, and the detection of elements of interest is carried out computing the distance between background region models and those of each incoming image in the sequence. The inclusion of the context in the modeling scheme through each region characterization makes the model robust, being able to support not only gradual illumination and long-term changes, but also sudden illumination changes and the presence of strong shadows in the scen

    CVABS: Moving Object Segmentation with Common Vector Approach for Videos

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    Background modelling is a fundamental step for several real-time computer vision applications that requires security systems and monitoring. An accurate background model helps detecting activity of moving objects in the video. In this work, we have developed a new subspace based background modelling algorithm using the concept of Common Vector Approach with Gram-Schmidt orthogonalization. Once the background model that involves the common characteristic of different views corresponding to the same scene is acquired, a smart foreground detection and background updating procedure is applied based on dynamic control parameters. A variety of experiments is conducted on different problem types related to dynamic backgrounds. Several types of metrics are utilized as objective measures and the obtained visual results are judged subjectively. It was observed that the proposed method stands successfully for all problem types reported on CDNet2014 dataset by updating the background frames with a self-learning feedback mechanism.Comment: 12 Pages, 4 Figures, 1 Tabl

    Using the discrete hadamard transform to detect moving objects in surveillance video

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    In this paper we present an approach to object detection in surveillance video based on detecting moving edges using the Hadamard transform. The proposed method is characterized by robustness to illumination changes and ghosting effects and provides high speed detection, making it particularly suitable for surveillance applications. In addition to presenting an approach to moving edge detection using the Hadamard transform, we introduce two measures to track edge history, Pixel Bit Mask Difference (PBMD) and History Update Value (H UV ) that help reduce the false detections commonly experienced by approaches based on moving edges. Experimental results show that the proposed algorithm overcomes the traditional drawbacks of frame differencing and outperforms existing edge-based approaches in terms of both detection results and computational complexity
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