33,983 research outputs found
Towards Vision-Based Smart Hospitals: A System for Tracking and Monitoring Hand Hygiene Compliance
One in twenty-five patients admitted to a hospital will suffer from a
hospital acquired infection. If we can intelligently track healthcare staff,
patients, and visitors, we can better understand the sources of such
infections. We envision a smart hospital capable of increasing operational
efficiency and improving patient care with less spending. In this paper, we
propose a non-intrusive vision-based system for tracking people's activity in
hospitals. We evaluate our method for the problem of measuring hand hygiene
compliance. Empirically, our method outperforms existing solutions such as
proximity-based techniques and covert in-person observational studies. We
present intuitive, qualitative results that analyze human movement patterns and
conduct spatial analytics which convey our method's interpretability. This work
is a step towards a computer-vision based smart hospital and demonstrates
promising results for reducing hospital acquired infections.Comment: Machine Learning for Healthcare Conference (MLHC
The Evolution of First Person Vision Methods: A Survey
The emergence of new wearable technologies such as action cameras and
smart-glasses has increased the interest of computer vision scientists in the
First Person perspective. Nowadays, this field is attracting attention and
investments of companies aiming to develop commercial devices with First Person
Vision recording capabilities. Due to this interest, an increasing demand of
methods to process these videos, possibly in real-time, is expected. Current
approaches present a particular combinations of different image features and
quantitative methods to accomplish specific objectives like object detection,
activity recognition, user machine interaction and so on. This paper summarizes
the evolution of the state of the art in First Person Vision video analysis
between 1997 and 2014, highlighting, among others, most commonly used features,
methods, challenges and opportunities within the field.Comment: First Person Vision, Egocentric Vision, Wearable Devices, Smart
Glasses, Computer Vision, Video Analytics, Human-machine Interactio
Towards Structured Analysis of Broadcast Badminton Videos
Sports video data is recorded for nearly every major tournament but remains
archived and inaccessible to large scale data mining and analytics. It can only
be viewed sequentially or manually tagged with higher-level labels which is
time consuming and prone to errors. In this work, we propose an end-to-end
framework for automatic attributes tagging and analysis of sport videos. We use
commonly available broadcast videos of matches and, unlike previous approaches,
does not rely on special camera setups or additional sensors.
Our focus is on Badminton as the sport of interest. We propose a method to
analyze a large corpus of badminton broadcast videos by segmenting the points
played, tracking and recognizing the players in each point and annotating their
respective badminton strokes. We evaluate the performance on 10 Olympic matches
with 20 players and achieved 95.44% point segmentation accuracy, 97.38% player
detection score ([email protected]), 97.98% player identification accuracy, and stroke
segmentation edit scores of 80.48%. We further show that the automatically
annotated videos alone could enable the gameplay analysis and inference by
computing understandable metrics such as player's reaction time, speed, and
footwork around the court, etc.Comment: 9 page
Detect the unexpected: a science for surveillance
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to outline a strategy for research development focused on addressing the neglected role of visual perception in real life tasks such as policing surveillance and command and control settings. Approach – The scale of surveillance task in modern control room is expanding as technology increases input capacity at an accelerating rate. The authors review recent literature highlighting the difficulties that apply to modern surveillance and give examples of how poor detection of the unexpected can be, and how surprising this deficit can be. Perceptual phenomena such as change blindness are linked to the perceptual processes undertaken by law-enforcement personnel. Findings – A scientific programme is outlined for how detection deficits can best be addressed in the context of a multidisciplinary collaborative agenda between researchers and practitioners. The development of a cognitive research field specifically examining the occurrence of perceptual “failures” provides an opportunity for policing agencies to relate laboratory findings in psychology to their own fields of day-to-day enquiry. Originality/value – The paper shows, with examples, where interdisciplinary research may best be focussed on evaluating practical solutions and on generating useable guidelines on procedure and practice. It also argues that these processes should be investigated in real and simulated context-specific studies to confirm the validity of the findings in these new applied scenarios
- …