Behaviour monitoring: investigation of local and distributed approaches

dc.contributor.advisorShin, Hyo-Sang
dc.contributor.advisorTsourdos, Antonios
dc.contributor.authorTurchi, Dario
dc.date.accessioned2020-03-27T13:35:00Z
dc.date.available2020-03-27T13:35:00Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.description.abstractNowadays, the widespread availability of cheap and efficient unmanned systems (either aerial, ground or surface) has led to significant opportunities in the field of remote sensing and automated monitoring. On the one hand, the definition of efficient approaches to information collection, filtering and fusion has been the focus of extremely relevant research streams over the last decades. On the other hand, far less attention has been given to the problem of ‘interpreting’ the data, thus implementing inference processes able to, e.g., spot anomalies and possible threats in the monitored scenario. It is easy to understand how the automation of the ‘target assessment’ process could bring a great impact on monitoring applications since it would allow sensibly alleviating the analysis burden for human operators. To this end, the research project proposed in this thesis addresses the problem of behaviour assessment leading to the identification of targets that exhibit features “of interest”. Firstly, this thesis has addressed the problem of distributed target assessment based on behavioural and contextual features. The assessment problem is analysed making reference to a layered structure and a possible implementation approach for the middle-layer has been proposed. An extensive analysis of the ‘feature’ concept is provided, together with considerations about the target assessment process. A case study considering a road-traffic monitoring application is then introduced, suggesting a possible implementation for a set of features related to this particular scenario. The distributed approach has been implemented employing a consensus protocol, which allows achieving agreement about high-level, non-measurable, characteristics of the monitored vehicles. Two different techniques, ‘Belief’ and ‘Average’ consensus, for distributed target assessment based on features are finally presented, enabling the comparison of consensus effects when implemented at different level of the considered conceptual hierarchy. Then, the problem of identifying targets concerning features is tackled using a different approach: a probabilistic description is adopted for the target characteristics of interest and a hypothesis testing technique is applied to the feature probability density functions. Such approach is expected to allow discerning whether a given vehicle is a target of interest or not. The assessment process introduced is also able to account for information about the context of the vehicle, i.e. the environment where it moves or is operated. In so doing the target assessment process can be effectively adapted to the contour conditions. Results from simulations involving a road monitoring scenario are presented, considering both synthetic and real-world data. Lastly, the thesis addresses the problem of manoeuvre recognition and behaviour anomalies detection for generic targets through pattern matching techniques. This problem is analysed considering motor vehicles in a multi-lane road scenario. The proposed approach, however, can be easily extended to significantly different monitoring contexts. The overall proposed solution consists in a trajectory analysis tool, which classifies the target position over time into a sequence of ‘driving modes’, and a string-matching technique. This classification allows, as result of two different approaches, detecting both a priori defined patterns of interest and general behaviours standing out from those regularly exhibited from the monitored targets. Regarding the pattern matching process, two techniques are introduced and compared: a basic approach based on simple strings and a newly proposed method based on ‘regular expressions’. About reference patterns, a technique for the automatic definition of a dictionary of regular expressions matching the commonly observed target manoeuvres is presented. Its assessment results are then compared to those of a classic multi-layered neural network. In conclusion, this thesis proposes some novel approaches, both local and distributed, for the identification of the ‘targets of interest’ within a multi-target scenario. Such assessment is solely based on the behaviour actually exhibited by a target and does not involve any specific knowledge about the targets (analytic dynamic models, previous data, signatures of any type, etc.), being thus easily applicable to different scenarios and target types. For all the novel approaches described in the thesis, numerical results from simulations are reported: these results, in all the cases, confirm the effectiveness of the proposed techniques, even if they appear to be open to interpretation because of the inherent subjectivity of the assessment process.en_UK
dc.identifier.urihttp://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/15338
dc.language.isoenen_UK
dc.rights© Cranfield University, 2015. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the copyright holder.
dc.titleBehaviour monitoring: investigation of local and distributed approachesen_UK
dc.typeThesisen_UK

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