Abstract

The explosion of artificial intelligence methods has paved the way for more sophisticated smart mobility solutions. In this work, we present a multi-camera video content analysis (VCA) system that exploits a single-shot multibox detector (SSD) network to detect vehicles, riders, and pedestrians and triggers alerts to drivers of public transportation vehicles approaching the surveilled area. The evaluation of the VCA system will address both detection and alert generation performance by combining visual and quantitative approaches. Starting from a SSD model trained for a single camera, we added a second one, under a different field of view (FOV) to improve the accuracy and reliability of the system. Due to real-time constraints, the complexity of the VCA system must be limited, thus calling for a simple multi-view fusion method. According to the experimental test-bed, the use of two cameras achieves a better balance between precision (68%) and recall (84%) with respect to the use of a single camera (i.e., 62% precision and 86% recall). In addition, a system evaluation in temporal terms is provided, showing that missed alerts (false negatives) and wrong alerts (false positives) are typically transitory events. Therefore, adding spatial and temporal redundancy increases the overall reliability of the VCA system.

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