An Investigation of Automatic Saccade and Fixation Detection from Wearable Infrared Cameras

Author(s):  
Zishan Wang ◽  
Julien Epps ◽  
Siyuan Chen
Author(s):  
E. Ramanujam ◽  
S. Padmavathi

Falls are the leading cause of injuries and death in elderly individuals who live alone at home. The core service of assistive living technology is to monitor elders’ activities through wearable devices, ambient sensors, and vision systems. Vision systems are among the best solutions, as their implementation and maintenance costs are the lowest. However, current vision systems are limited in their ability to handle cluttered environments, occlusion, illumination changes throughout the day, and monitoring without illumination. To overcome these issues, this paper proposes a 24/7 monitoring system for elders that uses retroreflective tape fabricated as part of conventional clothing, monitored through low-cost infrared (IR) cameras fixed in the living environment. IR camera records video even when there are changes in illumination or zero luminance. For classification among clutter and occlusion, the tape is considered as a blob instead of a human silhouette; the orientation angle, fitted through ellipse modeling, of the blob in each frame allows classification that detects falls without pretrained data. System performance was tested using subjects in various age groups and “fall” or “non-fall” were detected with 99.01% accuracy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 99 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhuoyi Wang ◽  
Saeed Shadpour ◽  
Esther Chan ◽  
Vanessa Rotondo ◽  
Katharine M Wood ◽  
...  

Abstract Monitoring, recording, and predicting livestock body weight (BW) allows for timely intervention in diets and health, greater efficiency in genetic selection, and identification of optimal times to market animals because animals that have already reached the point of slaughter represent a burden for the feedlot. There are currently two main approaches (direct and indirect) to measure the BW in livestock. Direct approaches include partial-weight or full-weight industrial scales placed in designated locations on large farms that measure passively or dynamically the weight of livestock. While these devices are very accurate, their acquisition, intended purpose and operation size, repeated calibration and maintenance costs associated with their placement in high-temperature variability, and corrosive environments are significant and beyond the affordability and sustainability limits of small and medium size farms and even of commercial operators. As a more affordable alternative to direct weighing approaches, indirect approaches have been developed based on observed or inferred relationships between biometric and morphometric measurements of livestock and their BW. Initial indirect approaches involved manual measurements of animals using measuring tapes and tubes and the use of regression equations able to correlate such measurements with BW. While such approaches have good BW prediction accuracies, they are time consuming, require trained and skilled farm laborers, and can be stressful for both animals and handlers especially when repeated daily. With the concomitant advancement of contactless electro-optical sensors (e.g., 2D, 3D, infrared cameras), computer vision (CV) technologies, and artificial intelligence fields such as machine learning (ML) and deep learning (DL), 2D and 3D images have started to be used as biometric and morphometric proxies for BW estimations. This manuscript provides a review of CV-based and ML/DL-based BW prediction methods and discusses their strengths, weaknesses, and industry applicability potential.


Machines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 112
Author(s):  
Loukas Bampis ◽  
Spyridon G. Mouroutsos ◽  
Antonios Gasteratos

The paper at hand presents a novel and versatile method for tracking the pose of varying products during their manufacturing procedure. By using modern Deep Neural Network techniques based on Attention models, the most representative points to track an object can be automatically identified using its drawing. Then, during manufacturing, the body of the product is processed with Aluminum Oxide on those points, which is unobtrusive in the visible spectrum, but easily distinguishable from infrared cameras. Our proposal allows for the inclusion of Artificial Intelligence in Computer-Aided Manufacturing to assist the autonomous control of robotic handlers.


Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (17) ◽  
pp. 4980
Author(s):  
Tung-Ching Su

The techniques of concrete crack detection, as well as assessments based on thermography coupled with ultrasound, have been presented in many works; however, they have generally needed an additional source of thermal infrared (TIR) radiance and have only been applied in laboratories. Considering the accessibility of thermal infrared cameras, a TIR camera (NEC F30W) was employed to detect cracking in the concrete wall of an historic house with a western architectural style in Kinmen, Taiwan, based on the TIR radiances of cracking. An operation procedure involving a series of image processing and statistical analysis processes was designed to evaluate the performance of the TIR camera in the assessment of the cracking width. This procedure using multiple measurements was implemented from March to August 2019, and the t-tests indicated that the temperature differences between the inside and outline of the concrete cracks remained insignificant as the temperature or relative humidity (RH) in the subtropical climate rose. The experimental results of the operation procedure indicated that the maximum focusing range, which is related to the size of the sensor array, and the minimum detectable crack width of a TIR camera should be 1.0 m and 6.0 mm, respectively, in order to derive a linear regression model with a determination coefficient R2 of 0.733 to estimate the cracking widths, based on the temperature gradients. The validation results showed that there was an approximate R2 value of 0.8 and a total root mean square error of ±2.5 mm between the cracking width estimations and the observations.


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Tremblay ◽  
Louis Belhumeur ◽  
Martin Chamberland ◽  
André Villemaire ◽  
Patrick Dubois ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 943-944
Author(s):  
Ignace T. C. Hooge ◽  
Diederick C. Niehorster ◽  
Marcus Nyström ◽  
Richard Andersson ◽  
Roy S. Hessels

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (16) ◽  
pp. 5041
Author(s):  
Waldemar Minkina

The article presents problems occurring during remote temperature measurement of lashing clamps of bridge connections on high voltage poles using thermal imaging cameras. The basic metrological parameters of thermal imaging cameras are described. On this basis, typical errors made during the inspection of high voltage lines supplying power substations are presented using infrared cameras. Researching the possible solutions for the problems of remote temperature measurement of small objects of electricity power systems—on the example of lashing clamps of bridge connections on high voltage poles in the proposed paper and showing the basic metrological aspects and parameters of thermal imaging cameras are important because, in this way, it is observed to eliminate costly interruptions in the supply of electricity associated with the breaking of power lines. Small objects are quite difficult to be controlled and monitored on large grids and on large powerline poles; thus, it is very challenging to interpret the data offered by thermograms. The problem of remote temperature measurement of small objects in electrical power engineering is very important from the point of view of the quality and reliability of electricity supply. Obtaining early warning information about the occurrence of overheating, e.g., on lashing clamps of bridge connections, is very important, as it eliminates costly interruptions in the supply of electricity associated with the breaking of power lines supplying high voltage switchgears or substations.


2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-90
Author(s):  
Zbigniew Skorupka

Abstract Friction brake temperature due to its influence on brakes’ operation is subject to many test and studies. Measurements methods of this important brake parameter are being continuously developed. In order to withstand difficulty in temperature evaluation in full brake system as well as in isolated friction pair is use of contactless measurement methods. Currently, the most widespread contactless testing method of the thermal effects is to measure infrared emission by pyrometers or thermographic (infrared) cameras. Thermal imaging method wasn’t used so far during aviation brake materials usefulness evaluation and certification testing performed in Instytut Lotnictwa Landing Gear Laboratory. In this paper, author described performed friction materials tests which were recorded with thermal imaging camera as well as evaluated usefulness of the method by comparing its accuracy to thermocouple measurement.


Author(s):  
Vladimir Yu. Volkov ◽  
Oleg A. Markelov ◽  
Mikhail I. Bogachev

Introduction. Detection, isolation, selection and localization of variously shaped objects in images are essential in a variety of applications. Computer vision systems utilizing television and infrared cameras, synthetic aperture surveillance radars as well as laser and acoustic remote sensing systems are prominent examples. Such problems as object identification, tracking and matching as well as combining information from images available from different sources are essential. Objective. Design of image segmentation and object selection methods based on multi-threshold processing. Materials and methods. The segmentation methods are classified according to the objects they deal with, including (i) pixel-level threshold estimation and clustering methods, (ii) boundary detection methods, (iii) regional level, and (iv) other classifiers, including many non-parametric methods, such as machine learning, neural networks, fuzzy sets, etc. The keynote feature of the proposed approach is that the choice of the optimal threshold for the image segmentation among a variety of test methods is carried out using a posteriori information about the selection results. Results. The results of the proposed approach is compared against the results obtained using the well-known binary integration method. The comparison is carried out both using simulated objects with known shapes with additive synthesized noise as well as using observational remote sensing imagery. Conclusion. The article discusses the advantages and disadvantages of the proposed approach for the selection of objects in images, and provides recommendations for their use.


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