Method of increasing detection zone of a shadow-based video intrusion detection system
10650646 ยท 2020-05-12
Assignee
Inventors
- Roy Allen (North Andover, MA, US)
- Stephen McMahon (Quincy, MA, US)
- Zachary Harvey (East Weymouth, MA, US)
Cpc classification
G08B13/1645
PHYSICS
G06V20/52
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
This disclosure relates to method of enhancing the three-dimensional detection range of a vision-based, single camera intrusion detection system within a tensile test machine or other materials testing machine. Illumination sources are offset from the camera and provide a cones of illumination which intersect with the conical viewing zone of the camera thereby defining a detection zone. When objects intrude into these conical regions, a shadow is cast. The shadow is detected by the camera. The detection of the intrusion is typically used as a safety function to deactivate at least part of the function of the materials testing machine.
Claims
1. A system for detection of intruding objects, including: a photographic or video device receiving an image from at least a portion of a surface; a first illumination device defining a first zone of illumination directed toward the surface thereby defining a first cone and a second illumination device defining a second zone of illumination directed toward the surface thereby defining a second cone; wherein the field of view of the photographic or video device defines a third cone; wherein the first, second and third cones at least partially intersect on the surface thereby defining an intrusion detection zone; and wherein an object intruding into at least a portion of the intrusion zone causes a shadow to be cast on the surface, whereby the shadow is at least a portion of the image being received by the photographic or video device, whereby presence of the object intruding into at least a portion of the intrusion detection zone is detected.
2. The system of claim 1 further including a contrasting boundary pattern on at least a portion of the surface where the first, second and third cones at least partially intersect.
3. The system of claim 1 wherein an image of an object intruding into at least a portion of the field of view of the photographic or video device is received by the photographic or video device, whereby presence of the object intruding into the field of view is detected.
4. The system of claim 1 wherein the first and second illumination sources are infra-red illumination sources.
5. A method for detection of intruding objects, including the steps of: providing a photographic or video device receiving an image of at least a portion of a surface; providing a first illumination device defining a first zone of illumination directed toward the surface thereby defining a first cone and a second illumination device defining a second zone of illumination directed toward the surface thereby defining a second cone; defining a third cone by the field of view of the photographic or video device; defining an intrusion zone by at least partial intersection of the first, second and third cones; detecting an image received by the photographic or video device of a shadow cast on the surface by an object intruding into at least a portion of intrusion detection zone.
6. The method of claim 5 further including the step of providing a contrasting boundary pattern on a portion of the surface wherein the first, second and third cones intersect.
7. The method of claim 4 wherein the step of providing a first illumination device and a second illumination device includes the step of providing a first infra-red illumination source and a second infra-red illumination source.
8. The method of claim 5 further including the step of detecting an image received by the photographic or video device of an object intruding into at least a portion of the field of view of the video or photographic device.
9. A system for materials testing, including: a materials testing device including an area where material is tested, including a surface proximate to the area where material is tested; a photographic or video device receiving an image of at least a portion of the surface; a first illumination device defining a first zone of illumination directed toward the surface thereby defining a first cone and a second illumination device defining a second zone of illumination directed toward the surface thereby defining a second cone; wherein the field of view of the photographic or video device defines a third cone: wherein the first, second and third cones at least partially intersect on the surface thereby defining an intrusion detection zone; and wherein an object intruding into at least a portion of the intrusion detection zone causes a shadow to be cast on the surface, whereby the shadow is at least a portion of the image being received by the photographic or video device, whereby presence of the object intruding into at least a portion of the intrusion detection zone is detected and the materials testing device is entered into a safe mode.
10. The system of claim 9 wherein a portion of the surface wherein the first, second and third cones intersect includes a contrasting boundary pattern.
11. The system of claim 9 wherein an object intruding into at least a portion of the field of view of the photographic or video device is detected by the photographic or video device and the materials testing device is entered into a safe mode.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Further objects and advantages of the disclosure will become apparent from the following description and from the accompanying drawings, wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(10) Referring now to the drawings in detail wherein like numerals indicate like elements throughout the several views, one sees that
(11) In this case, the contrasting boundary pattern 110 can be circular, semi-circular or elliptical. This pattern 110 is printed on the base pad (rubber mat) 112, which is typically a planar or substantially planar surface, at the base 113 of the machine 100 as shown in
(12) Shadow Detection
(13)
(14) The three-dimensional intrusion detection zone provided by the shadow method shown in
(15) The placement of the LED illumination source 124 on the left frame column 122 in
(16) Tensile Test Machine Example with Shadow Detection Method Added
(17) For the example tensile test machine shown in
(18)
(19) The camera 116 detects an intrusion object not only by direct view of the object when it is seen, but also by detecting its shadow when the object itself is unseen by the camera 116. That is, the camera 116 can detect an image of an object directly intruding into at least a portion of the field of view of the camera 116 (i.e., third cone 106), and can likewise detect shadows 302 generated by intrusion of the object 300 in the first and second cones 126, 127. The detection of the intrusion, either by detecting the shadow or by directly detecting the intruding object, is used to deactivate at least a portion of the functions of the materials testing machine 100 and place the machine 100 into a safe mode (typically at least including the deactivation of the gripping function of the jaws and movement of the crosshead), in order to enhance the safety of the operator.
(20) Implementation of the shadow method provides a continuous semi-circular shield of protection between the two columns 122, 123 for intrusion heights ranging from the base pad 112 up to the height just before the three cones 106, 126, 127 diverge and no longer intersect each other. The continuous protection zone height is approximately 68% of the height of the camera/LEDs. In this region, there is no longer a gap in three-dimensional intrusion detection zone for the operator to potentially reach through without being detected. Additionally, the size of the three-dimensional intrusion detection zone has been increased by approximately a factor of two.
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(22) An advantage of the shadow method is that there is typically no additional processing of the received or captured image required to add the shadow method since the same elliptical boundary 128 is being monitored for both methods. The detection system does not need to distinguish whether it was a shadow or a directly viewed object that crossed the white boundary. In either event an intrusion has occurred.
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(24) The goal is to detect when an intrusion object 300 (
Further Embodiments
(25) The configuration of the shadow method shown for the tensile test machine 100 is only one of many possible embodiments of the disclosure. Other embodiments and variations include:
(26) A. Alternate shape(s) and location(s) for the boundaries.
(27) B. Number and location of illumination sources 124, 125 used for shadow detection.
(28) C. Multiple independent detection boundaries; for example a unique boundary for each illumination source or a different boundary for shadow detection than for direct camera view.
(29) D. Orientation of the key componentsillumination sources 124, 125, camera(s) 116 and boundaries 128 can be adjusted to produce an arbitrary shape and orientation of a detection shield.
(30) E. Type of boundary pattern or shape used for either for direct view by camera 116 or for detection of shadows can take many forms: 1. High contrast marks on a surfaceprinted, embedded materials or fibers, embossed shapes, retro-reflective tape. 2. One piece three-dimensional formed reflector, for example to reflect light from a long segment of an illuminated area directly back to the camera 116 in which case the shape of the reflector determines the shape of the boundary line. 3. A programmable boundary stored in computer memory that evaluates local intensity changes on some surface; the surface may contain some form of regular contrast modulation, such as grid lines for example, to provide the camera with position information necessary implement an arbitrary boundary onto the received or captured image. 4. To facilitate isolation the of intensity effects produced by a given illuminator, the illumination may be modulated or have a unique wavelength relative to other illumination sources; for example to enable a single camera 116 to determine which illumination source produced the given shadow effect or, for example, to prevent other illumination sources 124, 125 from tending to wash out a shadow 302.
(31) A further variation is to use a three-dimensional formed reflector to define the boundary 128 on the base 113 instead of a patterned two-dimensional pad 112. The reflector would still be relatively thin in the z-axis (the height axis between the target base 113 and the camera 116) and would extend as an arbitrary bent object in the x-y plane of the base 113 to follow the desired shape of the boundary 128. The reflector may be, for example, a narrow segment cut out of a larger three-dimensional ellipsoidal surface volume that encloses both the camera and an illumination source in such a manner that each becomes one of the two focal points of the ellipsoid. In this manner the light from the selected source is always reflected directly back to the camera. The size of the three-dimensional ellipsoid is scaled so that its outer surface coincides roughly with the surface of the base 113 where the boundary 128 is to be located. The formed reflector shape is then defined by a narrow segment of the ellipsoidal surface in the vicinity of the base plane that is cut out to the desired x-y plane shape of the boundary. Generally the z-axis height of the three-dimensional reflector is minimal compared to its x and y axis extents. The z-axis height and surface pointing vector of any point along the top (reflective) surface of the reflector is defined by the ellipsoidal reflector that it was modeled from. If desired, the curvature height of the reflector could be reduced further by modulating the height along reflector length in a stepwise (sawtooth) fashion similar to Fresnel lens design so as to create a nearly flat reflector object.
(32) The result is a highly efficient boundary reflector in which light from a selected source always reflects directly back to the camera from any point along the locus of the boundary line. An important advantage of this method is that it effectively rejects light from all other sources such as: specular or scattered light from non-boundary areas, light from other sources in the system or interference illumination sources. The rejection is due to the high collection efficiency for the selected source compared to the other, non-focused illumination sources.
(33) As in earlier examples, any opaque object that directly blocks a segment of rays from the selected illumination source 124, 125 from reaching the boundary reflector creates a dark shadow on the bright boundary and is easily detected. This is the scenario where the object 300 (
SUMMARY OF DISCLOSED METHOD AND APPARATUS
(34) The disclosed concept uses controlled shadow generation to enhance the performance of a vision based intrusion detection system in a manner that otherwise could only be achieved by adding more video cameras to the system.
(35) A. Increases size/range of intrusion detection zone without the cost and image processing burden of adding more video cameras 116.
(36) B. Enables detection of intrusion objects 300 that are outside of the camera's field of view and therefore not visible to the camera 116.
(37) C. Camera image processing for intrusion detection is minimally affected by incorporating the disclosed embodimentessentially the same algorithm used for both forms of intrusion detection.
(38) D. Enhancement is achieved primarily with changes only to lower cost passive components; such as the means of implementing a visible boundary pattern.
(39) E. Illumination changes can amount to just changing the location of the illumination source(s) 124, 125.
(40) F. Arbitrary shaped detection zones can be achieved with proper placement of illumination source(s) 124, 125 and camera 116.
(41) G. Method can also be applied to multiple camera vision systems to increase size/range of intrusion detection zone by factors of two or more.
(42) Thus the several aforementioned objects and advantages are most effectively attained. Although preferred embodiments of the invention have been disclosed and described in detail herein, it should be understood that this invention is in no sense limited thereby.