Model for tracking moving targets using heterogeneous camera systems

Sufficient camera coverage is critical to the maintenance of the track continuity of a moving target across a large scale surveillance area. Due to economic and bandwidth reasons, it is often not possible to ensure that cameras within a large distributed surveillance system always have overlapping c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ning, Nan, Tan, Tele
Format: Journal Article
Published: Institute of Scientific Computing and Information 2007
Online Access:http://www.math.ualberta.ca/ijiss/SS-Volume-3-2007/No-3-07/SS-07-03-05.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/17887
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Summary:Sufficient camera coverage is critical to the maintenance of the track continuity of a moving target across a large scale surveillance area. Due to economic and bandwidth reasons, it is often not possible to ensure that cameras within a large distributed surveillance system always have overlapping coverage. Traditional tracking schemes that rely on fixed stationary cameras are prone to fail when the non-overlapping coverage between adjacent cameras becomes significant. In this paper, we present a novel approach on building a tracking model that uses heterogeneous camera systems to reduce the non-overlapping problem. We incorporate the surveillance cameras that are installed on public transport vehicles such as buses into the existing distributed camera system to dynamically increase the surveillance space, as when these vehicles move around the surveillance area the on-board cameras act as mobile video sensors. We adopt a grid-based filtering approach together with a road map to systematically integrate the multiple observations coming from the heterogeneous sensors. Simulated experimental results have shown that our approach has the potential to deal with large-scale observations that are prevalent in city-wide implementation.