Surveillance Cameras Get Smarter
AP | Feb. 25, 2007
By STEPHEN MANNING
COLLEGE PARK, Md.
(AP) - The next time you walk by a shop window, take a glance at
your reflection. How much do you swing your arms? Is the weight of
your bag causing you to hunch over? Do you still have a bit of that
1970s disco strut left?
Look around - You
might not be the only one watching. The never-blinking surveillance
cameras, rapidly becoming a part of daily life in public and even
private places, may be sizing you up as well. And they may soon get
a lot smarter.
Researchers and
security companies are developing cameras that not only watch the
world but also interpret what they see. Soon, some cameras may be
able to find unattended bags at airports, guess your height or
analyze the way you walk to see if you are hiding something.
Most of the cameras
widely used today are used as forensic tools to identify crooks
after-the-fact. (Think grainy video on local TV news of convenience
store robberies gone wrong.) But the latest breed, known as
``intelligent video,'' could transform cameras from passive
observers to eyes with brains, able to detect suspicious behavior
and potentially prevent crime before it occurs.
Surveillance
cameras are common in many cities, monitoring tough street corners
to deter crime, watching over sensitive government buildings and
even catching speeders. Cameras are on public buses and in train
stations, building lobbies, schools and stores. Most feed video to
central control rooms, where they are monitored by security staff.
The innovations
could mean fewer people would be needed to watch what they record,
and make it easier to install more in public places and private
homes.
``Law enforcement
people in this country are realizing they can use video surveillance
to be in a lot of places at one time,'' said Roy Bordes, who runs an
Orlando, Fla.-based security consulting company. He also is a
council vice president with ASIS International, a Washington-based
organization for security officials.
The advancements
have already been put to work. For example, cameras in Chicago and
Washington can detect gunshots and alert police. Baltimore installed
cameras that can play a recorded message and snap pictures of
graffiti sprayers or illegal dumpers.
In the commercial
market, the gaming industry uses camera systems that can detect
facial features, according to Bordes. Casinos use their vast banks
of security cameras to hunt cheating gamblers who have been flagged
before.
In London, one of
the largest users of surveillance, cameras provided key photos of
the men who bombed the underground system in July 2005 and four more
who failed in a second attempt just days later. But the cameras were
only able to help with the investigation, not prevent the attacks.
Companies that make
the latest cameras say the systems, if used broadly, could make
video surveillance much more powerful. Cameras could monitor
airports and ports, help secure homes and watch over vast borders to
catch people crossing illegally.
Intelligent
surveillance uses computer algorithms to interpret what a camera
records. The system can be programmed to look for particular things,
like an unattended bag or people walking somewhere they don't
belong.
``If you think of
the camera as your eye, we are using computer programs as your
brain,'' said Patty Gillespie, branch chief for image processing at
the Army Research Laboratory in Adelphi, Md. Today, the military
funds much of the smart-surveillance research.
At the University
of Maryland, engineering professor Rama Chellappa and a team of
graduate students have worked on systems that can identify a
person's unique gait or analyze the way someone walks to determine
if they are a threat.
A camera trained to
look for people on a watch list, for example, could combine their
unique walk with facial-recognition tools to make an identification.
A person carrying a heavy load under a jacket would walk differently
than someone unencumbered - which could help identify a person
hiding a weapon. The system could even estimate someone's height.
With two cameras
and a laptop computer set up in a conference room, Chellappa and a
team of graduate students recently demonstrated how intelligent
surveillance works.
A student walked
into the middle of the room, dropped a laptop case, then walked
away. On the laptop screen, a green box popped up around him as he
moved into view, then a second focused on the case when it was
dropped. After a few seconds, the box around the case went red,
signaling an alert.
In another video, a
car pulled into a parking lot and the driver got out, a box
springing up around him. It moved with the driver as he went from
car to car, looking in the windows instead of heading into the
building.
In both cases, the
camera knew what was normal - the layout of the room with the
suspicious bag and the location of the office door and parking spots
in the parking lot. Alerts were triggered when the unknown bag was
added and when the driver didn't go directly into the building after
parking his car.
Similar technology
is currently in use by Marines in Iraq and by the subway system in
Barcelona, according to ObjectVideo, a Reston, Va., firm that makes
surveillance software.
ObjectVideo uses a
``tripwire system'' that allows users to set up virtual perimeters
that are monitored by the cameras. If someone crosses that
perimeter, the system picks it up, sends out an alert, and security
staff can determine if there is a threat.
Company spokesman
Edward Troha predicts the technology, currently designed primarily
to protect borders, ports and other infrastructure, could be adapted
to help prevent retail theft or guard private homes.
The Jacksonville
Port Authority uses ObjectVideo software as part of its security
measures to watch the perimeter of the Florida port that handles 8.7
million tons of cargo and thousands of cruise ship passengers each
year. The surveillance system sends real-time video from anywhere at
the port of possible intruders to patrol cars.
Still, industry
officials say the technology needs to improve before it can be
widely used. There are liability issues, such as if someone is
wrongly tagged as a threat at an airport and misses a flight, said
Bordes. Troha warns humans are still essential to intelligent video,
to tell, for example, if a person in a restricted area is a danger
or just lost.
And the cameras can
only see so much - they can't stop some threats, like a bomber with
explosives in a backpack. They can't see what you are wearing under
your jacket - yet.
``That is an
eventual goal, but we're not there yet,'' said Chellappa.
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