Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Smart Cctv

Kingston University and its researchers have taken the watch cameras to a new height with Smart Cctv by integrating synthetic intelligence into it, which can identify specific activities like retention a gun. The technology has been advanced to give the police a technical reserve to identify the criminals and eliminate the innocent civilians from the camera footage. With the help of this technology a person can be followed over manifold cameras and areas. The technology is to teach the computer specific social behaviour, which is termed as Trigger Behaviour and can assess the video footage of before and after the incident to help the police generate the whole history of the incident. Smart Cctv can also trace the person with specific behaviour after the person leaves the area of incident and identify the law breakers as to when and where they entered the scene of crime.

The idea of Smart Cctv is that when the Cctv camera finds something suspicious, it alerts a human operator. For example, population seen lurking in a certain area or a car tantalizing too fast or too slow, indicating joyriding or kerb crawling can trigger an alarm. The human Cctv operator will then check the footage and resolve whether or not to send a police officer to investigate.

Kingston

Portsmouth City council is the first Uk local authority to use Smart Cctv. The whole network of the city with 152 watch cameras is now integrated to the Smart Cctv and has been programmed to identify the specific and unusual behaviour. Smart Cctv eliminates the unnecessary footage salvage time and power of the police division to incorporate only on the relevant footage.

Smart Cctv is a part of a task to generate an Ip Cctv Camera watch law to supply solutions to wider aspects of privacy concerns. The task has the European collaboration and is named Addpriv. The feature of the this technology is the self-acting elimination and deletion of the immoderate video footage data. The task is running on trail with the city council in Portsmouth and if, it proves to be successful, rest of the Uk cities will also have the technology to identify the specific behaviour of law breakers and criminals.

Nick Hewitson, managing director of Smart Cctv, the firm that created the technology says that "What it cannot do is say whether a guy is waiting for his girlfriend or about to commit a crime. That is for the operator to make a subjective human decision on."

Smart Cctv

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