 
        
        
        What's Around The Bend
        Dealing with transit security issues in real time
        
        
			- By Anthony Incorvati
- Jul 01, 2012
Transit authorities face security problems on an ongoing basis—everything
  from graffiti artists and pickpockets to precious metal theft and
  fuel siphoning. For years now, security experts have relied on camera
  installations for incident control, but too often surveillance video has
  been used more as a forensic tool to investigate the aftermath rather
  than as a practical tool to detect and possibly prevent incidents from happening.
  
The drawback is pretty obvious. By the time the relevant video is located and
  handed to authorities, the suspects are gone. And oftentimes, because of poor
  lighting conditions and outdated technologies, the video is too grainy to provide
  any usable details such as facial features and clothing color to assist in pursuit and
  apprehension. However, recent innovations in network video are reversing the tide
  by giving transit authorities real-time access to high-image-quality video streams.
From Forensic to Real-time
  
Moving from forensic to real-time security benefits transit systems, airports and
  even seaports on a number of levels. Handling incidents quickly is an effective way
  to boost passenger and staff confidence in transit safety. By being preemptive,
  transit property owners avoid the costly repercussions of vandalism, graffiti, metal
  theft and other nefarious acts—a savings that goes directly to the bottom line.
  Maybe more importantly, using the cameras to proactively monitor transit operations
  minimizes revenue losses due to disruption of service.
  
Some of the new network camera technologies on the market are bridging the
  noticeable gaps in coverage that previously frustrated transit authorities.
  
Of course, HDTV-quality network cameras continue to be an extremely popular
  purchase for all surveillance users, including those in the transportation market.
  High-resolution, true-color-fidelity video is replacing grainy analog images,
  resulting in a far greater percentage of positive identifications of people and objects.
  However, that image quality comes at a cost: higher pixel counts traditionally
  meant lower quality in poor and difficult lighting. But that’s where today’s IP
  imaging innovation shines.
  
Surveillance When Conditions are Less than Optimal
  
Transit system environments on the whole present a major challenge for video
  surveillance cameras—mainly because they’re plagued with poor or widely fluctuating
  lighting conditions that change in an instant. Historically, transit authorities
  accepted the fact that, without a massive artificial lighting investment, certain
  areas—yards and depots, tunnels, guideways, tracks and sometimes platforms and
  stations—simply couldn’t be monitored by video cameras.
  
With the introduction of three innovative network camera technologies, that’s
  no longer the case.
Low light. Lightfinder technology represents the latest advancement in extremely
  low-light surveillance. It works in concert with a network camera’s sensor
  and lens to find light in a scene that it can use to stream color video even at night.
  Sophisticated image processing software sets the degree of filtering and sharpening
  to capture the best image possible.
  
Highly sensitive to low light, a network camera enhanced with Lightfinder
  can maintain tight focus, with minimal noise, from dusk to dawn as well as in
  full sunlight.
  
But the crowning achievement is that unlike typical day/night cameras that
  switch to black-and-white mode in low light, Lightfinder cameras record in true,
  lifelike color fidelity across the illumination spectrum.
  
Widely fluctuating light. Wide Dynamic Range (WDR) technology incorporates
  techniques for handling a wide range of lighting conditions within a single
  scene, such as extremely bright and darkly shadowed corners or backlit situations
  where a person is standing between the sun and the camera. In those scenes, a
  standard surveillance camera would inevitably produce an image of a sun-washed
  person or objects in the dark areas barely visible. A network camera equipped with
  WDR, on the other hand, combines different exposures to different objects within
  a scene, depending on the prevailing light to ensure nearly uniform visibility across
  the field of view.
  
Total darkness or haze. Unlike day/night cameras that focus on recognizing images
  in the visible light spectrum, advanced thermal imaging cameras detect wavelengths
  far into the infrared spectrum. Analog thermal cameras have been around
  for years to detect the heat signatures emitted by all people and objects. These
  military-grade cameras once cost tens of thousands of dollars. Today, true thermal
  network cameras are an affordable option that can be easily integrated into
  a transit surveillance network to detect trespassers walking alongside the track at
  night or inside a dark tunnel.
Revealing Previously Hidden Activity
If used on their own or in conjunction
  with each other, these three technologies
  open up a whole new realm of surveillance
  coverage that wasn’t possible
  with older camera systems:
  
On the platforms and in the stations.
  While transit authorities made a
  concerted effort to blanket platforms
  and stations with video surveillance
  coverage, camera technology fell short
  when it came to piercing shadowy corners
  and alcoves. Sunlight glaring off
  the glass on outdoor platforms and
  headlights of oncoming trains taxed
  the abilities of the cameras to deliver
  quality video. But with Lightfinder,
  WDR and thermal imaging cameras
  augmenting their camera deployment,
  transit security can capture clear, useable
  images across the visual spectrum.
  For instance, when used at night, Lightfinder
  can distinguish between a red or
  black hooded sweatshirt and a blue
  or green backpack worn by someone
  standing on the platform. Grayscale
  guesses of old analog, black-and-white
  CCTV systems will become a thing of
  the past.
By the tunnels, guideways and tracks.
  Tunnel and track security has been especially
  problematic, given the widely
  exposed and open spaces that are unprotected
  from the elements with little
  or no illumination. Installing light
  poles and fixtures over miles of track is
  often too costly. Even guards patrolling
  the area can’t be everywhere at once,
  so vulnerable tunnels and sections of
  track are left unobserved for extended
  periods of time. Thermal imaging cameras
  can play a major role in securing
  these areas because they rely on heat
  detection rather than visible light to
  “see” what’s going on.
  
They can detect what conventional
  cameras miss and alert security to the
  presence of objects left on or near the
  tracks or trespassers on grade crossings.
  In daylight hours, WDR cameras
  can reveal what’s happening both inside
  the tunnel and at the entrance.
  
Inside the rail yards and depots.
  While personal assaults and theft rank
  high on the list of transit security
  threats, protection of corporate assets
  is another major area of concern.
  Railcars, subway coaches and busses
  parked in poorly lit yards and depots
  are especially vulnerable to vandalism
  and other acts of mischief. Fuel farms
  and supply depots offer their own allure
  to pilferers, coordinated gangs of
  criminals or even dishonest employees
  seeking to siphon gas or steal precious
  metals like copper. While perimeter
  fences and guards patrolling the area
  provide deterrence, Lightfinder and
  thermal imaging cameras give security
  the critical night vision to “see” into
  the shadows, eliminating the cover-ofdarkness
  advantage that offenders use
  to mask their activities.
  
Using Video for Operational
  Intelligence
  
Another trend gaining momentum in
  the transit arena is to expand the use
  of surveillance video to improve operations.
  Applying analytic technology
  such as automatic people counting
  (APC) helps transportation managers track traffic patterns both inside and
  outside a station to improve transit
  schedules and minimize passenger
  commute time. Monitoring the flow
  of people through entrances, exits and
  typically congested areas such as hallways,
  parking lots and walkways gives
  security personnel insight into pedestrian
  traffic and the ability to anticipate
  and react quickly to any incident or
  slowdown in service
  
This video analysis also helps station
  managers optimize security-staffing
  levels to handle crowds at peak
  travel times.
  
Integrating Multiple Systems
  Under One Umbrella
  
While new camera technologies like
  Lightfinder, WDR and thermal imaging
  certainly improve surveillance coverage,
  real success is often achieved
  when network video is part of an entire
  portfolio of physical security tools—
  from intrusion detection to access control
  to motion/audio sensors.
  
To avoid the chaos of trying to filter
  massive amounts of time-sensitive
  information from all these separate
  subsystems simultaneously, application
  developers are introducing new Physical
  Security Information Management
  (PSIM) systems to provide transit authorities
  a way to intelligently integrate
  data from disparate sources in real time
  within a single command center. Designed
  to provide an easy-to-read dashboard
  that prioritizes data according to
  pre-established criteria, PSIM systems
  bring the most important incidents to
  the foreground—like a trip-wire alert
  linked to video of an intruder trying to
  scale a fence after hours or a door-ajar
  alert tied to video of a vagrant trying
  to jimmy open a locked accessway near
  a station platform. This enables transit
  security to quickly address and resolve
  a problem before it escalates.
  
What’s Around the Bend?
  
Based on the continued R&D investment
  in the technology, IP innovation
  will continue on a sharp trajectory.
  Light sensitivity continues to become
  even more acute while HDTV-quality
  resolution and usage improves across
  an ever-wider dynamic range. We’re
  even seeing network cameras with
  the versatility to stream in 9:16 corridor
  format (“portrait” as opposed to
  “landscape”), a feature that’s ideal for
  covering long concourse areas, people
  movers, tunnels and station platforms
  without wasting pixels.
  
With the enormous advances manufacturers
  are achieving in chip technology
  and processing power, the potential
  for third-party development of video
  analytic applications specifically geared
  to the needs of the transportation industry
  is likely the next phase of innovation.
  With transit authorities adopting
  network video for more of their
  installations, it’s exciting to think of all
  the intriguing possibilities that are just
  around the bend.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        This article originally appeared in the Security Products Magazine - July 2012 issue of Security Today.