Texture-based feature mining for crowd density estimation: A study
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Khan, SD
Blumenstein, M
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Donald Bailey, Gourab Sen Gupta, Stephen Marsland
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Palmerston North, New Zealand
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Abstract
Texture feature is an important feature descriptor for many image analysis applications. The objectives of this research are to determine distinctive texture features for crowd density estimation and counting. In this paper, we have comprehensively reviewed different texture features and their different possible combinations to evaluate their performance on pedestrian crowds. A two-stage classification and regression based framework have been proposed for performance evaluation of all the texture features for crowd density estimation and counting. According to the framework, input images are divided into blocks and blocks into cells of different sizes, having varying crowd density levels. Due to perspective distortion, people appearing close to the camera contribute more to the feature vector than people far away. Therefore, features extracted are normalized using a perspective normalization map of the scene. At the first stage, image blocks are classified using multi-class SVM into different density level. At the second stage Gaussian Process Regression is used to re gress low-level features to count. Various texture features and their possible combinations are evaluated on publicly available dataset.
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International Conference Image and Vision Computing New Zealand
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Pattern recognition
Data mining and knowledge discovery