Abstract

In this paper, we propose a deep Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) for counting the number of people across a line-of-interest (LOI) in surveillance videos. It is a challenging problem and has many potential applications. Observing the limitations of temporal slices used by state-of-the-art LOI crowd counting methods, our proposed CNN directly estimates the crowd counts with pairs of video frames as inputs and is trained with pixel-level supervision maps. Such rich supervision information helps our CNN learn more discriminative feature representations. A two-phase training scheme is adopted, which decomposes the original counting problem into two easier sub-problems, estimating crowd density map and estimating crowd velocity map. Learning to solve the sub-problems provides a good initial point for our CNN model, which is then fine-tuned to solve the original counting problem. A new dataset with pedestrian trajectory annotations is introduced for evaluating LOI crowd counting methods and has more annotations than any existing one. Our extensive experiments show that our proposed method is robust to variations of crowd density, crowd velocity, and directions of the LOI, and outperforms state-of-the-art LOI counting methods.

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