Saturday, August 16, 2008
Amazing Video Enhancement Technology

The technology could also be used to seemlessly remove private content from surveillance video, truely making proctected images of people or objects invisible. That's probably welcome news to some, but disconcerting to law enforcement professials who already have significant concerns about the reliablity of photos presented them. Video has been generally thought of as much harder to manipulate...no more.
Labels: Privacy, University of Washingon, Video Analysis
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Computer Vision Resarch Goes Virtual
But ObjectVideo thinks there is a better way…at least to start. Using technology from the videogame Half Life 2 , they have built a Virtual Video Tool that can be used to create “virtual surveillance” cameras.The ObjectVideo Virtual Video (OVVV) Tool generates realistic video from simulated cameras in an interactive virtual world. This tool is free and is based on a modification (aka 'mod') of Half-Life 2, a commercially available game from Valve Software. Our hope in distributing this tool is to stimulate computer vision research in areas that cannot rely on canned video (eg. active tracking) or when large quantities of ground truthed video is unavailable or impractical (multi-camera installations, public spaces, the list goes on!).
Beyond that, ObjectVideo has created most of the environments, models, and camera option necessary to test every conceivable surveillance variation during the testing process. Even blur, noise, and even lens and PTZ effects can be simulated with relative ease.

Labels: Gaming, Object Recognition, Video Analysis


