Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem:
https://repositorio.ufu.br/handle/123456789/27115
Tipo de documento: | Dissertação |
Tipo de acceso: | Acesso Aberto |
Título: | Técnicas baseadas em similaridade para análise visual de videos de segurança |
Título (s) alternativo (s): | Similarity-based techniques for Visual Analysis of Surveillance Video |
Autor: | Silva Junior, Gilson Mendes da |
Primer orientador: | Paiva, José Gustavo de Souza |
Primer miembro de la banca: | Eler, Danilo Medeiros |
Segundo miembro de la banca: | Travençolo, Bruno Augusto Nassif |
Resumen: | Surveillance camera systems based on CCTV (closed-circuit television) are widely employed in a variety of society segments, from private and public security to crowd monitoring and terrorist attack prevention, generating a large volume of surveillance videos. The manual analysis of these videos is unfeasible due to the excessive amount of data to be analyzed, the associated subjectivity, and the presence of noise that can cause distraction and compromise the comprehension of relevant events, impairing an effective analysis. Automatic summarization techniques are usually employed to facilitate this analysis, providing additional information that may guide the security agent in this decision making. However, these strategies provide little/no user interaction, limiting his/her comprehension regarding the involved phenomena. Furthermore, such techniques only address specific scenarios, in the sense that no approach is good for all situations. In this sense, it is important to insert the user in the analysis process, as they provide the additional knowledge to effectively perform the events identification and exploration. Visual analytics techniques represent a potential tool for such analysis, providing video representations that clearly communicate their content, potentially revealing patterns that may represent events of interest. These representations can significantly increase the capacity of the security agent to identify important events, and filtering/exploring those that represent potential alert situations. In this project we propose a methodology for visual analysis of surveillance videos that employs Information Visualization techniques for events exploration. We specifically coordinate point-placement techniques and Temporal Self-similarity Maps (TSSMs) to create an analysis environment that reveal both structural and temporal aspects related to event occurrence. Users are able to interact with these layouts, in order to change the visualization perspective, focus on specific portions of the video, among other tasks. We present experiments in several surveillance scenarios that demonstrate the ability of the proposed methodology in providing an effective events summarization, the exploration of both the structure of each event and the relationship among them, as well as their temporal properties. The main contribution of this work is a surveillance visual analysis system which provides a deep exploration of different aspects present on surveillance videos regarding events occurrence, providing an effective analysis and a rapid decision making. |
Abstract: | Surveillance camera systems based on CCTV (closed-circuit television) are widely employed in a variety of society segments, from private and public security to crowd monitoring and terrorist attack prevention, generating a large volume of surveillance videos. The manual analysis of these videos is unfeasible due to the excessive amount of data to be analyzed, the associated subjectivity, and the presence of noise that can cause distraction and compromise the comprehension of relevant events, impairing an effective analysis. Automatic summarization techniques are usually employed to facilitate this analysis, providing additional information that may guide the security agent in this decision making. However, these strategies provide little/no user interaction, limiting his/her comprehension regarding the involved phenomena. Furthermore, such techniques only address specific scenarios, in the sense that no approach is good for all situations. In this sense, it is important to insert the user in the analysis process, as they provide the additional knowledge to effectively perform the events identification and exploration. Visual analytics techniques represent a potential tool for such analysis, providing video representations that clearly communicate their content, potentially revealing patterns that may represent events of interest. These representations can significantly increase the capacity of the security agent to identify important events, and filtering/exploring those that represent potential alert situations. In this project we propose a methodology for visual analysis of surveillance videos that employs Information Visualization techniques for events exploration. We specifically coordinate point-placement techniques and Temporal Self-similarity Maps (TSSMs) to create an analysis environment that reveal both structural and temporal aspects related to event occurrence. Users are able to interact with these layouts, in order to change the visualization perspective, focus on specific portions of the video, among other tasks. We present experiments in several surveillance scenarios that demonstrate the ability of the proposed methodology in providing an effective events summarization, the exploration of both the structure of each event and the relationship among them, as well as their temporal properties. The main contribution of this work is a surveillance visual analysis system which provides a deep exploration of different aspects present on surveillance videos regarding events occurrence, providing an effective analysis and a rapid decision making. |
Palabras clave: | Computação Vigilância eletrônica Videovigilância Visualização da informação Sistemas de segurança - monitoramento Vigilância inteligente Visualização baseada em similaridade Detecção de eventos Smart surveillance Information visualization Similarity-based visualization Events detection |
Área (s) del CNPq: | CNPQ::CIENCIAS EXATAS E DA TERRA::CIENCIA DA COMPUTACAO::METODOLOGIA E TECNICAS DA COMPUTACAO::BANCO DE DADOS CNPQ::CIENCIAS EXATAS E DA TERRA::CIENCIA DA COMPUTACAO::METODOLOGIA E TECNICAS DA COMPUTACAO::SISTEMAS DE INFORMACAO CNPQ::CIENCIAS EXATAS E DA TERRA::CIENCIA DA COMPUTACAO::METODOLOGIA E TECNICAS DA COMPUTACAO::PROCESSAMENTO GRAFICO (GRAPHICS) |
Idioma: | eng |
País: | Brasil |
Editora: | Universidade Federal de Uberlândia |
Programa: | Programa de Pós-graduação em Ciência da Computação |
Cita: | SILVA JUNIOR, Gilson Mendes da. Similarity-based techniques for visual analysis of surveillance video. 2019. 90 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Ciência da Computação) - Universidade Federal de Uberlândia, Uberlândia, 2019. DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.14393/ufu.di.2019.67. |
Identificador del documento: | http://dx.doi.org/10.14393/ufu.di.2019.67 |
URI: | https://repositorio.ufu.br/handle/123456789/27115 |
Fecha de defensa: | 29-sep-2019 |
Aparece en las colecciones: | DISSERTAÇÃO - Ciência da Computação |
Ficheros en este ítem:
Fichero | Descripción | Tamaño | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|---|
TecnicasBaseadasSimilaridade.pdf | 35.54 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizar/Abrir |
Este ítem está sujeto a una licencia Creative Commons Licencia Creative Commons