Presentation + Paper
13 May 2019 Edge-to-fog computing for color-assisted moving object detection
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Future Internet-of-Things (IoT) will be featured by ubiquitous and pervasive vision sensors that generate enormous amount of streaming videos. The ability to analyze the big video data in a timely manner is essential to delay-sensitive applications, such as autonomous vehicles and body-worn cameras for police forces. Due to the limitation of computing power and storage capacity on local devices, the fog computing paradigm has been developed in recent years to process big sensor data closer to the end users while it avoids the transmission delay and huge uplink bandwidth requirements in cloud-based data analysis. In this work, we propose an edge-to-fog computing framework for object detection from surveillance videos. Videos are captured locally at an edge device and sent to fog nodes for color-assisted L1-subspace background modeling. The results are then sent back to the edge device for data fusion and final object detection. Experimental studies demonstrate that the proposed color-assisted background modeling offers more diversity than pure luminance based background modeling and hence achieves higher object detection accuracy. Meanwhile, the proposed edge-to-fog paradigm leverages the computing resources on multiple platforms.
Conference Presentation
© (2019) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ying Liu, Zachary Bellay, Payton Bradsky, Glen Chandler, and Brandon Craig "Edge-to-fog computing for color-assisted moving object detection", Proc. SPIE 10989, Big Data: Learning, Analytics, and Applications, 1098903 (13 May 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2516023
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Video

RGB color model

Video surveillance

Binary data

Video processing

Cameras

Computing systems

RELATED CONTENT


Back to Top