Abstract

Object tracking is a fundamental task in video surveillance, human-computer interaction and activity analysis. One of the common challenges in visual object tracking is illumination variation. A large number of methods for tracking have been proposed over the recent years, and median flow tracker is one of them which can handle various challenges. Median flow tracker is designed to track an object using Lucas-Kanade optical flow method which is sensitive to illumination variation, hence fails when sudden illumination changes occur between the frames. In this paper, we propose an enhanced median flow tracker to achieve an illumination invariance to abruptly varying lighting conditions. In this approach, illumination variation is compensated by modifying the Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT) coefficients of an image in the logarithmic domain. The illumination variations are mainly reflected in the low-frequency coefficients of an image. Therefore, a fixed number of DCT coefficients are ignored. Moreover, the Discrete Cosine (DC) coefficient is maintained almost constant all through the video based on entropy difference to minimize the sudden variations of lighting impacts. In addition, each video frame is enhanced by employing pixel transformation technique that improves the contrast of dull images based on probability distribution of pixels. The proposed scheme can effectively handle the gradual and abrupt changes in the illumination of the object. The experiments are conducted on fast-changing illumination videos, and results show that the proposed method improves median flow tracker with outperforming accuracy compared to the state-of-the-art trackers

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