DocumentCode
2830339
Title
Selective subtraction when the scene cannot be learned
Author
Bhutta, Adeel A. ; Junejo, Imran N. ; Foroosh, Hassan
Author_Institution
Univ. of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA
fYear
2011
fDate
11-14 Sept. 2011
Firstpage
3273
Lastpage
3276
Abstract
Background subtraction techniques model the background of the scene using the stationarity property and classify the scene into two classes of foreground and background. In doing so, most moving objects become foreground indiscriminately, except for perhaps some waving tree leaves, water ripples, or a water fountain, which are typically “learned” as part of the background using a large training set of video data. We introduce a novel concept of background as the objects other than the foreground, which may include moving objects in the scene that cannot be learned from a training set because they occur only irregularly and sporadically, e.g. a walking person. We propose a “selective subtraction” method as an alternative to standard background subtraction, and show that a reference plane in a scene viewed by two cameras can be used as the decision boundary between foreground and background. In our definition, the foreground may actually occur behind a moving object. Furthermore, the reference plane can be selected in a very flexible manner, using for example the actual moving objects in the scene, if needed. We present diverse set of examples to show that: (i) the technique performs better than standard background subtraction techniques without the need for training, camera calibration, disparity map estimation, or special camera configurations; (ii) it is potentially more powerful than standard methods because of its flexibility of making it possible to select in real-time what to filter out as background, regardless of whether the object is moving or not, or whether it is a rare event or a frequent one.
Keywords
image motion analysis; video cameras; video signal processing; background subtraction; camera; decision boundary; moving object; reference plane; selective subtraction; stationarity property; video data; Cameras; Conferences; Legged locomotion; Real time systems; Sensitivity; Subtraction techniques; Training; Background Subtraction; Dynamic Scenes; Scene Modeling;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Image Processing (ICIP), 2011 18th IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Brussels
ISSN
1522-4880
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-1304-0
Electronic_ISBN
1522-4880
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICIP.2011.6116369
Filename
6116369
Link To Document