61 research outputs found

    A survey on computer vision technology in Camera Based ETA devices

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    Electronic Travel Aid systems are expected to make impaired persons able to perform their everyday tasks such as finding an object and avoiding obstacles easier. Among ETA devices, Camera Based ETA devices are the new one and with a high potential for helping Visually Impaired Persons. With recent advances in computer science and specially computer vision, Camera Based ETA devices used several computer vision algorithms and techniques such as object recognition and stereo vision in order to help VIP to perform tasks such as reading banknotes, recognizing people and avoiding obstacles. This paper analyses and appraises a number of literatures in this area with focus on stereo vision technique. Finally, after discussing about the methods and techniques used in different literatures, it is concluded that the stereo vision is the best technique for helping VIP in their everyday navigation

    Activity Monitoring Made Easier by Smart 360-degree Cameras

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    This paper proposes the use of smart 360-degree cameras for activity monitoring. By exploiting the geometric properties of these cameras and adopting off-the-shelf tracking algorithms adapted to equirectangular images, this paper shows how simple it becomes deploying a camera network, and detecting the presence of pedestrians in predefined regions of interest with minimal information on the camera, namely its height. The paper further shows that smart 360-degree cameras can enhance motion understanding in the environment and proposes a simple method to estimate the heatmap of the scene to highlight regions where pedestrians are more often present. Quantitative and qualitative results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach

    Global Shipping Container Monitoring Using Machine Learning with Multi-Sensor Hubs and Catadioptric Imaging

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    We describe a framework for global shipping container monitoring using machine learning with multi-sensor hubs and infrared catadioptric imaging. A wireless mesh radio satellite tag architecture provides connectivity anywhere in the world which is a significant improvement to legacy methods. We discuss the design and testing of a low-cost long-wave infrared catadioptric imaging device and multi-sensor hub combination as an intelligent edge computing system that, when equipped with physics-based machine learning algorithms, can interpret the scene inside a shipping container to make efficient use of expensive communications bandwidth. The histogram of oriented gradients and T-channel (HOG+) feature as introduced for human detection on low-resolution infrared catadioptric images is shown to be effective for various mirror shapes designed to give wide volume coverage with controlled distortion. Initial results for through-metal communication with ultrasonic guided waves show promise using the Dynamic Wavelet Fingerprint Technique (DWFT) to identify Lamb waves in a complicated ultrasonic signal

    Development of an Active Vision System for the Remote Identification of Multiple Targets

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    This thesis introduces a centralized active vision system for the remote identification of multiple targets in applications where the targets may outnumber the active system resources. Design and implementation details of a modular active vision system are presented, from which a prototype has been constructed. The system employs two different, yet complimentary, camera technologies. Omnidirectional cameras are used to detect and track targets at a low resolution, while perspective cameras mounted to pan-tilt stages are used to acquire high resolution images suitable for identification. Five greedy-based scheduling policies have been developed and implemented to manage the active system resources in an attempt to achieve optimal target-to-camera assignments. System performance has been evaluated using both simulated and real-world experiments under different target and system configurations for all five scheduling policies. Parameters affecting performance that were considered include: target entry conditions, congestion levels, target to camera speeds, target trajectories, and number of active cameras. An overall trend in the relative performance of the scheduling algorithms was observed. The Least System Reconfiguration and Future Least System Reconfiguration scheduling policies performed the best for the majority of conditions investigated, while the Load Sharing and First Come First Serve policies performed the poorest. The performance of the Earliest Deadline First policy was seen to be highly dependent on target predictability

    Development of an Active Vision System for the Remote Identification of Multiple Targets

    Get PDF
    This thesis introduces a centralized active vision system for the remote identification of multiple targets in applications where the targets may outnumber the active system resources. Design and implementation details of a modular active vision system are presented, from which a prototype has been constructed. The system employs two different, yet complimentary, camera technologies. Omnidirectional cameras are used to detect and track targets at a low resolution, while perspective cameras mounted to pan-tilt stages are used to acquire high resolution images suitable for identification. Five greedy-based scheduling policies have been developed and implemented to manage the active system resources in an attempt to achieve optimal target-to-camera assignments. System performance has been evaluated using both simulated and real-world experiments under different target and system configurations for all five scheduling policies. Parameters affecting performance that were considered include: target entry conditions, congestion levels, target to camera speeds, target trajectories, and number of active cameras. An overall trend in the relative performance of the scheduling algorithms was observed. The Least System Reconfiguration and Future Least System Reconfiguration scheduling policies performed the best for the majority of conditions investigated, while the Load Sharing and First Come First Serve policies performed the poorest. The performance of the Earliest Deadline First policy was seen to be highly dependent on target predictability

    Panomoprh Based Panoramic Vision Sensors

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    A dataset of annotated omnidirectional videos for distancing applications

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    Omnidirectional (or 360◦ ) cameras are acquisition devices that, in the next few years, could have a big impact on video surveillance applications, research, and industry, as they can record a spherical view of a whole environment from every perspective. This paper presents two new contributions to the research community: the CVIP360 dataset, an annotated dataset of 360◦ videos for distancing applications, and a new method to estimate the distances of objects in a scene from a single 360◦ image. The CVIP360 dataset includes 16 videos acquired outdoors and indoors, annotated by adding information about the pedestrians in the scene (bounding boxes) and the distances to the camera of some points in the 3D world by using markers at fixed and known intervals. The proposed distance estimation algorithm is based on geometry facts regarding the acquisition process of the omnidirectional device, and is uncalibrated in practice: the only required parameter is the camera height. The proposed algorithm was tested on the CVIP360 dataset, and empirical results demonstrate that the estimation error is negligible for distancing applications
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