Video Surveillance Systems Takes Us to New Line

Video Surveillance Systems Takes Us to New Line

We want the best quality when it comes to security. There are many growing trends on the market that give you the best of what you want. Now, Video Surveillance Systems get even more intelligent. CCTV gives you now a better quality picture, detail and even more peace of mind. Here are a few trends of what to expect to our CCTV technology that you should watch out for.

Tamper Detection

Shows and movies revolve around some criminal activity that a thief spray the lens of the video surveillance camera in order to mask their activities. Tamper detection is a setting within your IP camera that will send you alerts when the camera is tampered with. It can detect lost vision, even changes in camera direction. The alert lets you know to log into your video management system to see what happened.

Face Detection

Face detection identifies human faces. It can compare captured images against an image data bank by identifying the key features of human faces.The template matching approach develops templates based on facial information extracted and registers the relationship in the system. It also uses biometric facial recognition systems that compare images of individuals from incoming video feeds against specific databases and send alerts when a positive match occurs.

A feature variant approach utilizes facial features which are less influenced by rotation, size, and lighting changes. It combines information about eyes, noses, and mouths to determine the presence of a person’s face. The accuracy of these facial recognition technologies continues to improve with today’s high-resolution cameras ability to capture extreme details even under challenging conditions.

Audio Detection

Through audio detection technology, the camera’s audio sensor can detect abnormal sound levels. It then automatically notify operators via event signals so they can take suitable action.

Intelligent Video Analysis

Security operators are responsible for monitoring video images from an average of 20 or more cameras. Furthermore, viewing this many monitors and cameras simultaneously is ineffective and prevents operators from focusing on core monitoring duties. A primary benefit of video analytics is that it helps to alleviate the problem of operator fatigue. It automates the process to detect unexpected movement or unusual behaviour that may pose a threat. Then, an operator can simply search recorded video for specific event types to quickly locate an incident, saving valuable time.

Comments are closed.