By Katharina Geutebrück
Video motion detectors have been around for many years. High-end models have a proven track record in securing extensive and high security sites: prisons, power plants, airports, defence establishments and the like. They are extremely efficient at detecting movement in specified zones and very good at eliminating the effects of global environmental changes such as those caused by weather or mast movement. Its forte is recognizing different kinds of specified objects in a video scene. To understand why it makes sense to use them together, let us first focus on the differences between the two systems.
VMD
Video Motion Detectors (VMD) detect and report motion in predefined areas of a camera image. They work by analyzing the composite video signal from the CCTV camera, or to be more precise, they analyze an electrical representation of the instantaneous grey shades in the picture and monitor this for changes in brightness or contrast. In a picture from a fixed camera and in an environment with fixed illumination, this change can logically be deduced to be the result of activity in the scene. However, a VMD designed for outdoor situations where light levels and other conditions vary widely has to have a few important extra sophistications which eliminate benign environmental changes while enabling the detection of potential threats.
First, its sensitivity has to be very high to enable it to detect low contrast intruders in front of equally low contrast backgrounds, and to be able to analyze each individual detection zone in the scene for the subtle differences caused by environmental changes. Comparing results across the whole image is what enables the VMD to deduce which changes are global, and therefore benign, and which are localized and more likely to represent a hazard. Second, the VMD has to compare and store information from successive images from the same camera fast enough to ensure that a fast-moving target is captured within the operating cycle while it passes across the scene. And thirdly, the VMD has to enable the user to set up small detection zones in the far field which are much more sensitive than those in the near field. This is to counterbalance the fact that any target naturally appears larger, and causes more signal disturbance when it is near the camera, than when it is far away.
(Source: Geutebruck)
VIDEO ANALYTICS
Video analytics (VA) is the technology of using intelligent software to filter and manage real-time CCTV video. Here it is the pixels in the whole video picture which are analyzed. The software continuously analyzes the scene and deduces for itself the basic underlying model, then constantly updates it for global changes such as weather and lighting. Current pictures are continuously compared with the updated background model and any unnatural changes are compared with the user¡¯s target specification. The user can specify the target objects by their likely size, speed, direction of movement and status, and he can link their properties. The system can recognize ¡®person¡¯, ¡®car¡¯, ¡®fast¡¯, ¡®slow¡¯, ¡®wrong direction¡¯, ¡®object appearing¡¯ and ¡®object disappearing¡¯, separately, or only when logically combined with each other. This enables the system to trigger alerts when a person moves fast, or a car goes in the wrong direction, but to ignore a car going fast or a person going in the wrong direction. The user can also define different areas of interest in the scene and associate them with different target characteristics and alarm response behaviors.
Geutebrück¡¯s Dual-Sensor recognizes ¡®person¡¯, ¡®car¡¯, ¡®fast¡¯, ¡®slow¡¯, ¡®wrong direction¡¯, ¡®object appearing¡¯ and ¡®object disappearing¡¯, separately, or only when logically combined with each other (Photo by Geutebrück)
SEPARATE BUT TOGETHER
When both detection systems are run independently to monitor the same scene, their output can be logically combined so that an alarm is only passed on to the operator when the precise pre-determined criteria for both systems are met at the same time. This means, for instance, that a bird which might trigger a VMD alarm because it meets the system¡¯s movement and location criteria, would not match the VA¡¯s specific size threat criteria, so no combined system alarm would be issued. And, on the other hand, when the wind deflects the leaves in a shrubbery and deceives the VA into registering the shape of a person or a car the VMD does not react, so no alarm is reported.
Working together the systems¡¯ strengths are exploited and their weaknesses reduced. Each system alone would produce a small, but (possibly highly) undesirable number of unwanted alarms. But with two finely-tuned, compatible systems running in tandem, then it is possible to get very, very close to the ideal situation of no unwanted alarms.
Katharina Geutebrück is Managing Director of Geutebrück GmbH (http://www.geutebrueck.com/).
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