DocumentCode
2369172
Title
Skills in detecting gun carrying from CCTV
Author
Blechko, Anastassia ; Darker, Iain ; Gale, Alastair
Author_Institution
Appl. Vision Res. Centre, Univ. of Loughborough, Loughborough
fYear
2008
fDate
13-16 Oct. 2008
Firstpage
265
Lastpage
271
Abstract
Gun crime is an increasingly common occurrence in the UK. An ongoing research programme is investigating the ability of humans to detect whether or not an individual, captured on CCTV, is carrying a firearm. In the present study we argue that observers respond to cues which individuals inherently produce whilst carrying a concealed firearm. These cues might be reflected in the body language of those carrying firearms and might be apprehended by observers at a conscious or subconscious level. Simulated CCTV footage was generated of individuals who acted as surveillance targets and who carried, concealed on their persons, either firearms or matched innocuous objects. Trained CCTV operators and lay people then viewed this footage and were asked to indicate whether or not they thought the surveillance target was carrying a firearm. The size of the influence of carrying a firearm on a surveillance targetpsilas anxiety level was found to be related to the number of times that individual was deemed to be carrying a firearm. However, the surveillance targetpsilas anxiety level was not related to sensitivity in firearm detection. Additionally, a test of body language decoding ability did not show that the body language reading skills of observers were related to ability to detect a concealed firearm. These initial results provide some insight into the potential for using a surveillance targetpsilas body language to determine if they are concealing a weapon and whether or not such an ability can be acquired through surveillance training and experience.
Keywords
closed circuit television; video surveillance; CCTV; body language decoding; firearm; gun crime; gun detection; surveillance; Circuits; Decoding; Emotion recognition; Humans; Information analysis; Monitoring; Surveillance; TV; Testing; Weapons; CCTV; Firearm; emotion recognition; nonverbal behaviour;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Security Technology, 2008. ICCST 2008. 42nd Annual IEEE International Carnahan Conference on
Conference_Location
Prague
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1816-9
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-1817-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CCST.2008.4751312
Filename
4751312
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