3,593 research outputs found
Anonymous subject identification and privacy information management in video surveillance
The widespread deployment of surveillance cameras has raised serious privacy concerns, and many privacy-enhancing schemes have been recently proposed to automatically redact images of selected individuals in the surveillance video for protection. Of equal importance are the privacy and efficiency of techniques to first, identify those individuals for privacy protection and second, provide access to original surveillance video contents for security analysis. In this paper, we propose an anonymous subject identification and privacy data management system to be used in privacy-aware video surveillance. The anonymous subject identification system uses iris patterns to identify individuals for privacy protection. Anonymity of the iris-matching process is guaranteed through the use of a garbled-circuit (GC)-based iris matching protocol. A novel GC complexity reduction scheme is proposed by simplifying the iris masking process in the protocol. A user-centric privacy information management system is also proposed that allows subjects to anonymously access their privacy information via their iris patterns. The system is composed of two encrypted-domain protocols: The privacy information encryption protocol encrypts the original video records using the iris pattern acquired during the subject identification phase; the privacy information retrieval protocol allows the video records to be anonymously retrieved through a GC-based iris pattern matching process. Experimental results on a public iris biometric database demonstrate the validity of our framework
The Coverage Problem in Video-Based Wireless Sensor Networks: A Survey
Wireless sensor networks typically consist of a great number of tiny low-cost electronic devices with limited sensing and computing capabilities which cooperatively communicate to collect some kind of information from an area of interest. When wireless nodes of such networks are equipped with a low-power camera, visual data can be retrieved, facilitating a new set of novel applications. The nature of video-based wireless sensor networks demands new algorithms and solutions, since traditional wireless sensor networks approaches are not feasible or even efficient for that specialized communication scenario. The coverage problem is a crucial issue of wireless sensor networks, requiring specific solutions when video-based sensors are employed. In this paper, it is surveyed the state of the art of this particular issue, regarding strategies, algorithms and general computational solutions. Open research areas are also discussed, envisaging promising investigation considering coverage in video-based wireless sensor networks
DOT: Dynamic Object Tracking for Visual SLAM
In this paper we present DOT (Dynamic Object Tracking), a front-end that
added to existing SLAM systems can significantly improve their robustness and
accuracy in highly dynamic environments. DOT combines instance segmentation and
multi-view geometry to generate masks for dynamic objects in order to allow
SLAM systems based on rigid scene models to avoid such image areas in their
optimizations.
To determine which objects are actually moving, DOT segments first instances
of potentially dynamic objects and then, with the estimated camera motion,
tracks such objects by minimizing the photometric reprojection error. This
short-term tracking improves the accuracy of the segmentation with respect to
other approaches. In the end, only actually dynamic masks are generated. We
have evaluated DOT with ORB-SLAM 2 in three public datasets. Our results show
that our approach improves significantly the accuracy and robustness of
ORB-SLAM 2, especially in highly dynamic scenes
Privacy Intelligence: A Survey on Image Sharing on Online Social Networks
Image sharing on online social networks (OSNs) has become an indispensable
part of daily social activities, but it has also led to an increased risk of
privacy invasion. The recent image leaks from popular OSN services and the
abuse of personal photos using advanced algorithms (e.g. DeepFake) have
prompted the public to rethink individual privacy needs when sharing images on
OSNs. However, OSN image sharing itself is relatively complicated, and systems
currently in place to manage privacy in practice are labor-intensive yet fail
to provide personalized, accurate and flexible privacy protection. As a result,
an more intelligent environment for privacy-friendly OSN image sharing is in
demand. To fill the gap, we contribute a systematic survey of 'privacy
intelligence' solutions that target modern privacy issues related to OSN image
sharing. Specifically, we present a high-level analysis framework based on the
entire lifecycle of OSN image sharing to address the various privacy issues and
solutions facing this interdisciplinary field. The framework is divided into
three main stages: local management, online management and social experience.
At each stage, we identify typical sharing-related user behaviors, the privacy
issues generated by those behaviors, and review representative intelligent
solutions. The resulting analysis describes an intelligent privacy-enhancing
chain for closed-loop privacy management. We also discuss the challenges and
future directions existing at each stage, as well as in publicly available
datasets.Comment: 32 pages, 9 figures. Under revie
Dynamic Reconfiguration in Camera Networks: A Short Survey
There is a clear trend in camera networks towards enhanced functionality and flexibility, and a fixed static deployment is typically not sufficient to fulfill these increased requirements. Dynamic network reconfiguration helps to optimize the network performance to the currently required specific tasks while considering the available resources. Although several reconfiguration methods have been recently proposed, e.g., for maximizing the global scene coverage or maximizing the image quality of specific targets, there is a lack of a general framework highlighting the key components shared by all these systems. In this paper we propose a reference framework for network reconfiguration and present a short survey of some of the most relevant state-of-the-art works in this field, showing how they can be reformulated in our framework. Finally we discuss the main open research challenges in camera network reconfiguration
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