Purpose - The growth of police operated surveillance cameras has
out-paced the ability of humans to monitor them effectively. Computer vision is
a possible solution. An ongoing research project on the application of computer
vision within a municipal police department is described. The paper aims to
discuss these issues.
Design/methodology/approach - Following the demystification of
computer vision technology, its potential for police agencies is developed
within a focus on computer vision as a solution for two common surveillance
camera tasks (live monitoring of multiple surveillance cameras and summarizing
archived video files). Three unaddressed research questions (can specialized
computer vision applications for law enforcement be developed at this time, how
will computer vision be utilized within existing public safety camera
monitoring rooms, and what are the system-wide impacts of a computer vision
capability on local criminal justice systems) are considered.
Findings - Despite computer vision becoming accessible to law
enforcement agencies the impact of computer vision has not been discussed or
adequately researched. There is little knowledge of computer vision or its
potential in the field.
Originality/value - This paper introduces and discusses computer
vision from a law enforcement perspective and will be valuable to police
personnel tasked with monitoring large camera networks and considering computer
vision as a system upgrade