Design, Development, Deployment and Performance Evaluation of Pyroelectric Infra-Red and Optical Camera based Intrusion Detection Systems in an Outdoor Setting
Abstract
The primary contribution of this thesis is the comprehensive design, development, and
deployment of a pyroElectric, InfraRed-sensor-based IntruSion classification (EIRIS)
platform, along with attendant detection and classification algorithms and performance
evaluation. While the use of Pyroelectric InfraRed (PIR) sensors to detect human motion
in an indoor setting has been extensively studied in the literature, there is considerably
less research in comparison which deals with the use of PIR sensor in an outdoor
environment. The outdoor environment poses additional challenges in the form of the
presence of animals, moving vegetative clutter and environments in which the ambient
temperature is close to that of the human body. An additional contribution of the
thesis, is the development of a separate, optical-camera-based sensing platform termed
as LITE (short for Light-based Intrusion classificaion system) which is designed to
be used as a sensing modality complementary to the EIRIS platform, that could step
in situations where the accuracy of the EIRIS platform was compromised by adverse
ambient-temperature conditions