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| United States Patent | 4160998 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4160998.html |
| Inventor(s) | Kamin; Gerhard (Traisa, DE) |
| Abstract | The invention concerns an alarm system for detecting a movement or change
in the field of view supervised by a television camera. A discriminator,
for example an edge discriminator or an amplitude discriminator, produces
a signal upon the occurrence of a predetermined characteristic in the
picture content of the video signal from the camera. The number of such
signals occurring during each of a plurality of successive television
fields is compared with a reference value which is periodically updated.
The reference value is derived by counting the total number of signals
occurring during a plurality of field periods preceding that for which the
comparison is effected and dividing the total by the number of fields
thereby generating an arithmetical mean value. Each comparison generates a
difference signal which is further evaluated to determine whether a
relevant variation in the field of view of the camera has occurred,
whereupon an alarm is released. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4160998 |
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Television-based alarm system |
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| Publication Date |
July 10, 1979 |
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| Filing Date |
April 15, 1977 |
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| Priority Data |
Apr 17, 1976[DE]2617111 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. An alarm system for detecting a movement or change in the field of view
supervised by a television camera, the system comprising a discriminator
responsive to the video signal produced by the camera and adapted to
produce a signal upon the occurrence of a predetermined characteristic in
the picture content of the video signal, means for providing a succession
of reference values each derived by adding the number of signals produced
by the discriminator during a plurality of equal time intervals of
predetermined duration and dividing the sum so formed by the number of
time intervals over which the addition is performed, difference value
means for generating difference values between the number of signals
produced by the discriminator during each of a succession of time
intervals, each time interval equal to the said predetermined duration,
and the currently provided reference value, comparing means for comparing
the difference values with a preselected first value to produce an event
signal, and evaluating the event signal according to a predetermined
criterion to produce an alarm with the criterion is satisfied.
2. An alarm system according to claim 1, in which the television camera
operates according to the interlaced scanning technique.
3. An alarm system according to claim 1, in which the evaluating means
comprises means to compare each difference value with a preselected first
value and for producing an event signal when the first value is exceeded,
a further counter for counting the number of event signals, means to
compare the count condition of the further counter with a preselected
second value, and means for generating an alarm signal when the second
value is exceeded.
4. An alarm system according to claim 3, in which the further counter is
cleared at predetermined intervals.
5. An alarm system according to claim 1, in which the time intervals of
predetermined duration are television field periods.
6. An alarm system according to claim 5, in which the evaluating means
comprises means to compare each difference value with a preselected first
value and for producing an event signal when the first value is exceeded,
a further counter for counting the number of event signals, means to
compare the count condition of the further counter with a preselected
second value, and means for generating an alarm signal when the second
value is exceeded.
7. An alarm system according to claim 6, in which the television camera
operates according to the interlaced scanning technique.
8. An alarm system according to claim 6, in which the further counter is
cleared at predetermined intervals.
9. An alarm system according to claim 8, in which the difference value
means comprises a counter in which the currently provided reference value
is set, and in which the signals derived from the discriminator are
subtracted from the value set in the counter.
10. An alarm system according to claim 8, in which the television camera
operates according to the interlaced scanning technique. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to an alarm system for detecting movement or change
in the field of view supervised by a television camera.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Television-based alarm systems are known in which a value, dependent upon
the picture content of the video signal produced by the television camera,
is stored and compared with a value derived at a later time so as to
produce a difference, and in which an alarm is emitted upon the difference
so produced being in excess of a certain threshold value.
Such a system is disclosed in DT-OS No. 19 13 768. In this system, for the
purpose of detecting relevant variations, the total field under
supervision is subdivided into a number of individual regions which are
separately evaluated. The threshold value of one region can be adjusted
independently from that of the other regions. Thus those regions in which
irrelevant background movements take place can be isolated from those
where the background remains constant. In this way it is possible to
detect slight but relevant variations in the total field under supervision
without increasing the probability of a spurious alarm being released.
An object of the present invention is to provide an alarm system for
detecting movement or change in the field of view supervised by a
television camera and which has, or may be designed to have, an increased
reliability of response to relevant variations in the total supervised
field and at the same time a reduced probability of the release of
spurious alarms caused by unavoidable disturbances of a stochastic
character. A further object is to provide a system which can be
implemented at a reduced capital cost as compared with the prior art.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, the present invention provides an alarm system for detecting a
movement or change in the field of view supervised by a television camera,
the system comprising a discriminator responsive to the video signal
produced by the camera and adapted to produce a signal upon the occurrence
of a predetermined characteristic in the picture content of the video
signal, means for providing a succession of reference values each derived
by adding the number of signals produced by the discriminator during a
plurality of equal time intervals of predetermined duration and dividing
the sum so formed by the number of time intervals over which the addition
is performed, means for comparing the number of signals produced by the
discriminator during each of a succession of time intervals, each equal to
the said predetermined duration, with the currently provided reference
value to produce respective difference values, and means for evaluating
the difference values according to a predetermined criterion to produce an
alarm when the criterion is satisfied.
The inventive system is based upon the fact that false alarms are--as
regards their timing--statistically distributed. Due to the statistical
distribution of false alarms, their probability may be described as
stochastic and may also be controlled by stochastic means. By suitable
choice of reference value on an adequate statistical basis and
determinable deviations from this value, and by the assembly of detected
events into groups, it is possible to reduce the probability of false
alarms and advantageously therewith to lower the detection threshold of a
relevant event in the supervised field of view of the television camera.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
An embodiment of the invention will now be described, by way of example,
with reference to the accompanying drawing, whose single FIGURE is a block
schematic diagram of a system according to the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
In the block schematic diagram the video signal produced by a television
camera 1, which is aligned upon the object or scene to be supervised, is
delivered to an amplitude filter 2 and a changeover switch 3. The
television camera 1 preferably operates according to the interlaced
scanning technique. In the amplitude filter 2 the synchronous component of
the video signal is separated from the latter and, by pulse processing of
the synchronous component, a control signal is derived for a control unit
4. The control unit 4 controls the timing of the operating cycle of the
alarm system and the control signal derived by the amplitude filter and
pulse processor 2 ensures that the cycle timing as determined by the unit
4 is in synchronism with the field periods of the video signal from the
camera 1. By means of the changeover switch 3 the video signal may be
delivered to an edge discriminator 5 or to an amplitude discriminator 6.
The discriminators 5 and 6 convert the analog video signal into a series
of counting pulses representing the scene viewed by the camera 1, each
pulse being produced upon the occurrence of a particular characteristic in
the picture content of the video signal. For example, in the edge
discriminator 5, upon a predetermined rate of signal level variation being
exceeded in the picture signal, a pulse is delivered independently of the
absolute signal level. Because an edge discriminator 5 only registers
structural variations, it is particularly suited for evaluating pictures
which are characterised by relatively rapid temporary fluctuations of
brightness (e.g. open air scenes with rapidly variable lighting caused by
moving clouds) but which are irrelevant for the alarm system. The
amplitude discriminator 6 on the other hand always delivers a counting
pulse if the brightness of the picture exceeds a predetermined threshold
value. The particular discriminator used is preselected in dependence upon
the particular character of the scene or object in the field of view of
the camera 1 and the relevant variations thereof which are expected and
which it is desired to detect. Other kinds of discriminator may be used
instead of, or in addition to, those specifically mentioned above. Our
copending application
Ser. No. 787,956 filed Apr. 15, 1977 describes several other discriminators
which may be used.
The counting pulses available at the output of the selected discriminator 5
or 6 are delivered both to a mean value former 7 and to a differential
counter 8. The mean value former 7 adds together the counting pulses
delivered at the discriminator output during a plurality of television
fields determined by the control unit 4, and divides the sum so formed by
the number of these fields. The mean value former 7 can consist of a dual
counter controlled by the control unit 4, by the use of which a division
by powers of 2 can be obtained in a simple manner in that, beginning with
the lowest position of the counter, one or more succeeding positions of
the counter are ignored upon reading out. The mean value produced by the
mean value former 7 is fed as a reference value into a store 9, which may
have only a low bit capacity, for example 24 bits. Before commencing the
evaluation of a particular field to determine whether a relevant movement
or change has occurred in the field of view of the camera 1 which it is
desired to detect, a differential counter 8 is, by control exercised by
the control unit 4, set with the reference value stored in the store 9.
The differential counter 8 (controlled by the control unit 4) subtracts
from the set value the number of counting pulses produced by the
discriminator 5 or 6 during the field to be evaluated, and produces
thereby a difference which is directly available at the end of the
respective field in question. It is to be noted that not every field need
be evaluated for the purpose of deriving an alarm signal. The interval at
which fields are selected for evaluation is determined by the control unit
4, which only activates the differential counter 8 for the required
fields. The difference is always represented as a positive quantity
because the differential counter 8 is preferably automatically adapted to
pass from a reverse to a forward counting mode upon passing through the
null position.
By means of a comparator 10, the difference at the output of the
differential counter 8 is compared with a preselected first value which is
fed in at a terminal 11. Upon this first value being exceeded an "event"
signal is generated by the comparator 10, and an "event" counter 12
connected to the output of the comparator 10 registers an event. This
event counter 12 will register a maximum of one event for each evaluated
field. By control exercised by the control unit 4 the counter 12 is reset
to zero after a predetermined number of fields corresponding to a
predetermined reference interval. If during the reference interval the
number of events registered at the output of the counter 12 exceeds a
preselectable second value fed in at a terminal 13, then a further
comparator 14 delivers an alarm actuating signal to an alarm generator 15.
The reference value which is read into the store 9, is by means of control
exercised by the control unit 4, replaced at predetermined intervals by a
fresh reference value originating from the mean value former 7. This
ensures that there is a quasi-static response to slow changes in the
picture which are irrelevant to the alarm system.
The greater is the number of events at the output of the event counter 12
required for the release of an alarm, the nearer can the first preselected
value (at terminal 11), responsible for the formation of an event pulse,
be allowed to approach the mean value of the differences, which,
theoretically, will be zero at the difference counter 8 in the case of an
unchanging scene structure. This has the advantageous result that even
small, but significant variations in the picture field, which manifest
themselves by a corresponding displacement of the mean value, can be
detected without sporadically occurring event pulses, due to dispersion
errors of the counter, resulting in a false alarm. After the completion of
the predetermined number of field evaluations occurring during the
reference interval the event counter 12 is cleared by the control unit 4
so that evaluation takes place not in respect of an absolute number of
events but a timed event frequency.
By the employment of a statistically known method for reducing stochastic
disturbances and increasing the response reliability to relevant
variations in the supervised field of view of the television camera, the
above system results in a substantial increase in sensitivity as compared
with known systems. Furthermore, because the system preferably involves
the processing of binary signals and only a small storage capacity is
necessary, the system can be put into practice with the use of integrated
circuit components which allows a greater economy and a greater saving of
space than the prior art system.
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Description  |
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