HomeTechnologyArtificial IntelligenceResearchers Design AI System for Social Distance Breach Detection

Researchers Design AI System for Social Distance Breach Detection

Griffith University researchers have developed an AI video surveillance system to detect social distancing breaches in an airport without compromising privacy.

By keeping image processing gated to a local network of cameras, the team bypassed the traditional need to store sensitive data on a central system.

Professor Dian Tjondronegoro from Griffith Business School says data privacy is one of the biggest concerns with this technology because the system has to constantly observe people’s activities to be effective.

“These adjustments are added to the central decision-making model to improve accuracy.”

The case study was completed at Gold Coast Airport which, pre-COVID-19 had 6.5 million passengers annually with 17,000 passengers on-site daily. Hundreds of cameras cover 290,000 square meters with hundreds of shops and more than 40 check-in points.

Researchers tested several cutting-edge algorithms, lightweight enough for local computation, across nine cameras in three related case studies testing automatic people detection, automatic crowd counting and social distance breach detection to find the best balance of performance without sacrificing accuracy and reliability.

“Our goal was to create a system capable of real-time analysis with the ability to detect and automatically notify airport staff of social distancing breaches,” Professor Tjondronegoro said.

Three cameras were used for the automatic social distance breach detection testing covering the check-in area, food court and waiting area. Two people were employed to compare live video feeds and the AI analysis results to determine if people marked as red were in breach.

Researchers found camera angles affect the ability of AI to detect and track people’s movements in a public area and recommend angling cameras between 45 to 60 degrees.

Professor Tjondronegoro said their AI-enabled system design was flexible enough to allow humans to double check results reducing data bias and improving transparency in how the system works.

“The system can scale up in the future by adding new cameras and be adjusted for other purposes. Our study shows responsible AI design can and should be useful for future developments of this application of technology.”

ELE Times Bureau
ELE Times Bureauhttps://www.eletimes.ai/
ELE Times provides a comprehensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build awareness, drive traffic, communicate your offerings to right audience, generate leads and sell your products better.

Related News

Must Read

Next-Gen Upgrade to the Halo Series, NoiseFit Halo 3 brings Presence-Led Design and AI to the Wrist

Noise, India’s leading connected lifestyle brand, announces the launch...

Keysight Expands PCIe 7.0 Test Portfolio with New Receiver Stress Calibration

Keysight Technologies today announces a new PCIe 7.0 Receiver...

VETH100A1DD1 ESD Protection Diode Passes IEEE 10BASE-T1S Compliance Tests

The Vishay Semiconductor VETH100A1DD1 ESD has successfully passed IEEE...

Union Cabinet Authorises Two New Semiconductor Units With an Incremental Investment of Rs. 3,936 Crore

The Union Cabinet approves two more semiconductor projects under...

Arrow Electronics Launches Web-based “Digital Test Drive” to Streamline Hardware Testing

Arrow Electronics today announced the launch of Digital Test...

From Updates to Intelligence: How OTA, Data, and Ethernet Are Reshaping Vehicles

In an exclusive interview with ELE Times, Shrikant Acharya,...

Exploring The Surreality Of High-End Manufacturing On Indian Soil With Sudhir Tangri And Takuya Furata From Keysight

As Keysight explores localization and diversification opportunities through its...