Real-time object detection using dynamic principal component analysis

Author(s):  
G B Kaplan ◽  
O Icoglu ◽  
A B Yoldemir ◽  
M Sezgin
2017 ◽  
Vol 31 (19-21) ◽  
pp. 1740040
Author(s):  
Biao Yang ◽  
Jinmeng Cao ◽  
Ling Zou

Robust principal component analysis (RPCA) decomposition is widely applied in moving object detection due to its ability in suppressing environmental noises while separating sparse foreground from low rank background. However, it may suffer from constant punishing parameters (resulting in confusion between foreground and background) and holistic processing of all input frames (leading to bad real-time performance). Improvements to these issues are studied in this paper. A block-RPCA decomposition approach was proposed to handle the confusion while separating foreground from background. Input frame was initially separated into blocks using three-frame difference. Then, punishing parameter of each block was computed by its motion saliency acquired based on selective spatio-temporal interesting points. Aiming to improve the real-time performance of the proposed method, an on-line solution to block-RPCA decomposition was utilized. Both qualitative and quantitative tests were implemented and the results indicate the superiority of our method to some state-of-the-art approaches in detection accuracy or real-time performance, or both of them.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-36
Author(s):  
Ranak Roy Chowdhury ◽  
Muhammad Abdullah Adnan ◽  
Rajesh K. Gupta

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Shengkun Xie ◽  
Anna T. Lawniczak

Many network monitoring applications and performance analysis tools are based on the study of an aggregate measure of network traffic, for example, number of packets in transit (NPT). The simulation modeling and analysis of this type of performance indicator enables a theoretical investigation of the underlying complex system through different combination of network setups such as routing algorithms, network source loads or network topologies. To detect stationary increase of network source load, we propose a dynamic principal component analysis (PCA) method, first to extract data features and then to detect a stationary load increase. The proposed detection schemes are based on either the major or the minor principal components of network traffic data. To demonstrate the applications of the proposed method, we first applied them to some synthetic data and then to network traffic data simulated from the packet switching network (PSN) model. The proposed detection schemes, based on dynamic PCA, show enhanced performance in detecting an increase of network load for the simulated network traffic data. These results show usefulness of a new feature extraction method based on dynamic PCA that creates additional feature variables for event detection in a univariate time series.


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