Graphics enhanced version of this site
A Master-Slave System to Acquire Biometric Imagery of Humans at Distance
X. Zhou, R. Collins, T. Kanade, and P. Metes
ACM International Workshop on Video Surveillance, November, 2003.
Jump to: Download | Abstract | Notes | Text Reference | BibTeX Reference
Adobe portable document format (pdf) [398 KB]
Copyright notice: This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. These works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.
The Distant Human Identification (DHID) system is a master-slave, real-time surveillance system designed to acquire biometric imagery of humans at distance. A stationary wide field of view master camera is used to monitor an environment at distance. When the master camera detects a moving person, a narrow field of view slave camera is commanded to turn to that direction, acquire the target human, and track them while recording zoomed-in images. These zoomed-in views provide meaningful biometric imagery of the distant humans, who are not recognizable in the master view. Based on the lenses we currently use, the system can detect and track moving people at distances up to 50 meters, within a 60o field of regard.
Sponsor: HumanID
Grant ID: ONR contract N00014-00-1-0915
Associated center: VASC
Associated lab/group: Human Identification at a Distance
X. Zhou, R. Collins, T. Kanade, and P. Metes, "A Master-Slave System to Acquire Biometric Imagery of Humans at Distance," ACM International Workshop on Video Surveillance, November, 2003.
@inproceedings{Zhou_2003_4549,
author = "Xuhui Zhou and Robert Collins and Takeo Kanade and Peter Metes",
title = "A Master-Slave System to Acquire Biometric Imagery of Humans at Distance",
booktitle = "ACM International Workshop on Video Surveillance",
month = "November",
year = "2003"
}