DocumentCode
3337942
Title
Environmentally caused variation in exterior intrusion detection
Author
Peck, L.
Author_Institution
US Army Cold Regions Res. & Eng. Lab., Hanover, NH, USA
fYear
1995
fDate
16-18 May 1995
Firstpage
167
Lastpage
171
Abstract
Environmentally-dependent detection capability is an inescapable aspect of the overall reliability of exterior intrusion detection systems (IDSs). For this reason, security managers need to be aware of the specific site conditions that affect their IDSs. Proximity-to-alarm monitoring provides a direct indication of the interaction between an IDS and its operating environment. In addition to temporal variability in site conditions, there is spatial variability when differences in factors such as exposure to solar radiation, topography, wind funneling, ground cover, etc., cause location-dependent differences in near-surface conditions in response to the same weather. An understanding of the complexity of the environment in which IDSs operate and of the IDSs´ responses to changes in their environment will greatly assist security personnel in determining the reliability of their exterior IDSs
Keywords
access control; environmental factors; environmentally caused variation; environmentally-dependent detection capability; exterior intrusion detection systems; ground cover; location-dependent differences; near-surface conditions; proximity-to-alarm monitoring; reliability; security managers; security personnel; site conditions; solar radiation; spatial variability; temporal variability; topography; weather; wind funneling;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
iet
Conference_Titel
Security and Detection, 1995., European Convention on
Conference_Location
Brighton
Print_ISBN
0-85296-640-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1049/cp:19950491
Filename
491714
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