422 research outputs found

    Detection of Motorcycles in Urban Traffic Using Video Analysis: A Review

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    Motorcycles are Vulnerable Road Users (VRU) and as such, in addition to bicycles and pedestrians, they are the traffic actors most affected by accidents in urban areas. Automatic video processing for urban surveillance cameras has the potential to effectively detect and track these road users. The present review focuses on algorithms used for detection and tracking of motorcycles, using the surveillance infrastructure provided by CCTV cameras. Given the importance of results achieved by Deep Learning theory in the field of computer vision, the use of such techniques for detection and tracking of motorcycles is also reviewed. The paper ends by describing the performance measures generally used, publicly available datasets (introducing the Urban Motorbike Dataset (UMD) with quantitative evaluation results for different detectors), discussing the challenges ahead and presenting a set of conclusions with proposed future work in this evolving area

    Comprehensive Survey and Analysis of Techniques, Advancements, and Challenges in Video-Based Traffic Surveillance Systems

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    The challenges inherent in video surveillance are compounded by a several factors, like dynamic lighting conditions, the coordination of object matching, diverse environmental scenarios, the tracking of heterogeneous objects, and coping with fluctuations in object poses, occlusions, and motion blur. This research endeavor aims to undertake a rigorous and in-depth analysis of deep learning- oriented models utilized for object identification and tracking. Emphasizing the development of effective model design methodologies, this study intends to furnish a exhaustive and in-depth analysis of object tracking and identification models within the specific domain of video surveillance

    Vision-based traffic surveys in urban environments

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    This paper presents a state-of-the-art, vision-based vehicle detection and type classification to perform traffic surveys from a roadside closed-circuit television camera. Vehicles are detected using background subtraction based on a Gaussian mixture model that can cope with vehicles that become stationary over a significant period of time. Vehicle silhouettes are described using a combination of shape and appearance features using an intensity-based pyramid histogram of orientation gradients (HOG). Classification is performed using a support vector machine, which is trained on a small set of hand-labeled silhouette exemplars. These exemplars are identified using a model-based preclassifier that utilizes calibrated images mapped by Google Earth to provide accurately surveyed scene geometry matched to visible image landmarks. Kalman filters track the vehicles to enable classification by majority voting over several consecutive frames. The system counts vehicles and separates them into four categories: car, van, bus, and motorcycle (including bicycles). Experiments with real-world data have been undertaken to evaluate system performance and vehicle detection rates of 96.45% and classification accuracy of 95.70% have been achieved on this data.The authors gratefully acknowledge the Royal Borough of Kingston for providing the video data. S.A. Velastin is grateful to funding received from the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement nº 600371, el Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (COFUND2013-51509) and Banco Santander

    Motorcycle detection and classification in urban Scenarios using a model based on Faster R-CNN

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    This paper has been presented at: 9th International Conference on Pattern Recognition Systems (ICPRS-18)This paper introduces a Deep Learning Convolutional Neutral Network model based on Faster-RCNN for motorcycle detection and classification on urban environments. The model is evaluated in occluded scenarios where more than 60% of the vehicles present a degree of occlusion. For training and evaluation, we introduce a new dataset of 7500 annotated images, captured under real traffic scenes, using a drone mounted camera. Several tests were carried out to design the network, achieving promising results of 75% in average precision (AP), even with the high number of occluded motorbikes, the low angle of capture and the moving camera. The model is also evaluated on low occlusions datasets, reaching results of up to 92% in AP.S.A. Velastin is grateful to funding received from the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement no. 600371, el Ministerio de EconomĂ­a y Competitividad (COFUND2013-51509) and Banco Santander. The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of NVIDIA Corporation with the donation of the GPUs used for this research. The data and code used for this work is available upon request from the authors
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