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Deciphering the Crowd: Modeling and Identification of Pedestrian Group Motion

Associating attributes to pedestrians in a crowd is relevant for various areas like surveillance, customer profiling and service providing. The attributes of interest greatly depend on the application domain and might involve such social relations as friends or family as well as the hierarchy of the...

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Autores principales: Yücel, Zeynep, Zanlungo, Francesco, Ikeda, Tetsushi, Miyashita, Takahiro, Hagita, Norihiro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3574710/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23344382
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s130100875
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author Yücel, Zeynep
Zanlungo, Francesco
Ikeda, Tetsushi
Miyashita, Takahiro
Hagita, Norihiro
author_facet Yücel, Zeynep
Zanlungo, Francesco
Ikeda, Tetsushi
Miyashita, Takahiro
Hagita, Norihiro
author_sort Yücel, Zeynep
collection PubMed
description Associating attributes to pedestrians in a crowd is relevant for various areas like surveillance, customer profiling and service providing. The attributes of interest greatly depend on the application domain and might involve such social relations as friends or family as well as the hierarchy of the group including the leader or subordinates. Nevertheless, the complex social setting inherently complicates this task. We attack this problem by exploiting the small group structures in the crowd. The relations among individuals and their peers within a social group are reliable indicators of social attributes. To that end, this paper identifies social groups based on explicit motion models integrated through a hypothesis testing scheme. We develop two models relating positional and directional relations. A pair of pedestrians is identified as belonging to the same group or not by utilizing the two models in parallel, which defines a compound hypothesis testing scheme. By testing the proposed approach on three datasets with different environmental properties and group characteristics, it is demonstrated that we achieve an identification accuracy of 87% to 99%. The contribution of this study lies in its definition of positional and directional relation models, its description of compound evaluations, and the resolution of ambiguities with our proposed uncertainty measure based on the local and global indicators of group relation.
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spelling pubmed-35747102013-02-25 Deciphering the Crowd: Modeling and Identification of Pedestrian Group Motion Yücel, Zeynep Zanlungo, Francesco Ikeda, Tetsushi Miyashita, Takahiro Hagita, Norihiro Sensors (Basel) Article Associating attributes to pedestrians in a crowd is relevant for various areas like surveillance, customer profiling and service providing. The attributes of interest greatly depend on the application domain and might involve such social relations as friends or family as well as the hierarchy of the group including the leader or subordinates. Nevertheless, the complex social setting inherently complicates this task. We attack this problem by exploiting the small group structures in the crowd. The relations among individuals and their peers within a social group are reliable indicators of social attributes. To that end, this paper identifies social groups based on explicit motion models integrated through a hypothesis testing scheme. We develop two models relating positional and directional relations. A pair of pedestrians is identified as belonging to the same group or not by utilizing the two models in parallel, which defines a compound hypothesis testing scheme. By testing the proposed approach on three datasets with different environmental properties and group characteristics, it is demonstrated that we achieve an identification accuracy of 87% to 99%. The contribution of this study lies in its definition of positional and directional relation models, its description of compound evaluations, and the resolution of ambiguities with our proposed uncertainty measure based on the local and global indicators of group relation. MDPI 2013-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3574710/ /pubmed/23344382 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s130100875 Text en © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Yücel, Zeynep
Zanlungo, Francesco
Ikeda, Tetsushi
Miyashita, Takahiro
Hagita, Norihiro
Deciphering the Crowd: Modeling and Identification of Pedestrian Group Motion
title Deciphering the Crowd: Modeling and Identification of Pedestrian Group Motion
title_full Deciphering the Crowd: Modeling and Identification of Pedestrian Group Motion
title_fullStr Deciphering the Crowd: Modeling and Identification of Pedestrian Group Motion
title_full_unstemmed Deciphering the Crowd: Modeling and Identification of Pedestrian Group Motion
title_short Deciphering the Crowd: Modeling and Identification of Pedestrian Group Motion
title_sort deciphering the crowd: modeling and identification of pedestrian group motion
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3574710/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23344382
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s130100875
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