Title :
Vehicle tracking across nonoverlapping cameras using joint kinematic and appearance features
Author :
Matei, Bogdan C. ; Sawhney, Harpreet S. ; Samarasekera, Supun
Author_Institution :
SRI Int. Sarnoff, Princeton, NJ, USA
Abstract :
We describe a vehicle tracking algorithm using input from a network of nonoverlapping cameras. Our algorithm is based on a novel statistical formulation that uses joint kinematic and image appearance information to link local tracks of the same vehicles into global tracks with longer persistence. The algorithm can handle significant spatial separation between the cameras and is robust to challenging tracking conditions such as high traffic density, or complex road infrastructure. In these cases, traditional tracking formulations based on MHT, or JPDA algorithms, may fail to produce track associations across cameras due to the weak predictive models employed. We make several new contributions in this paper. Firstly, we model kinematic constraints between any two local tracks using road networks and transit time distributions. The transit time distributions are calculated dynamically as convolutions of normalized transit time distributions that are learned and adapted separately for individual roads. Secondly, we present a complete statistical tracker formulation, which combines kinematic and appearance likelihoods within a multi-hypothesis framework. We have extensively evaluated the algorithm proposed using a network of ground-based cameras with narrow field of view. The tracking results obtained on a large ground-truthed dataset demonstrate the effectiveness of the algorithm proposed.
Keywords :
cameras; object tracking; statistical analysis; traffic engineering computing; appearance features; ground based cameras; ground truthed dataset; image appearance information; joint kinematic features; kinematic constraints; multihypothesis framework; nonoverlapping cameras; road networks; statistical tracker formulation; track associations; transit time distributions; vehicle tracking; weak predictive models; Cameras; Kinematics; Radar tracking; Roads; Signal processing algorithms; Target tracking; Vehicles;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), 2011 IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
Providence, RI
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-0394-2
DOI :
10.1109/CVPR.2011.5995575