When it comes to professional Face Recognition, we at Track-a-face understand the complexities of this technology. From the types of cameras required, the ideal positioning of those cameras and how the software can be set up to maximise the return on the investment.
Face detection is generally a term used for cameras and digital recording devices to pick out the characteristics of the human face and then put a coloured box around it. This is often then used as a trigger or an alarm of some sort to activate the system or bring to the operators attention that a face / person has been detected. Often these systems can only work on a small number of faces at a time with one frame of video. This is also the technology employed in mobile phones and gaming consoles.
Face recognition is now common place in many domestic applications, in laptops it is used to to recognise the person logging in and to perform the login automatically, smart TV's utilise the technology to provide the viewer with a preferred channel listing.
Track-a-face is a professional surveillance tool for government, town centre surveillance, shopping malls and other high footfall areas. The major difference between track-a-face products and its domestic relatives, is its processing speed. The software is developed over many years by Herta in Spain and is capable of processing 40 or more faces in a continuous video feed. It will detect ALL the faces, analyse ALL the faces and compare them with its database of known people. If it finds a match it will then trigger an alarm and bring up a picture of the detected person the picture from the saved database and the details of the person that are held on file.
Providing the cameras are set correctly, the system has been shown to be more than 95% accurate.
Face detection is generally a term used for cameras and digital recording devices to pick out the characteristics of the human face and then put a coloured box around it. This is often then used as a trigger or an alarm of some sort to activate the system or bring to the operators attention that a face / person has been detected. Often these systems can only work on a small number of faces at a time with one frame of video. This is also the technology employed in mobile phones and gaming consoles.
Face recognition is now common place in many domestic applications, in laptops it is used to to recognise the person logging in and to perform the login automatically, smart TV's utilise the technology to provide the viewer with a preferred channel listing.
Track-a-face is a professional surveillance tool for government, town centre surveillance, shopping malls and other high footfall areas. The major difference between track-a-face products and its domestic relatives, is its processing speed. The software is developed over many years by Herta in Spain and is capable of processing 40 or more faces in a continuous video feed. It will detect ALL the faces, analyse ALL the faces and compare them with its database of known people. If it finds a match it will then trigger an alarm and bring up a picture of the detected person the picture from the saved database and the details of the person that are held on file.
Providing the cameras are set correctly, the system has been shown to be more than 95% accurate.