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Synthetic Data for Video Surveillance Applications of Computer Vision: A Review.

Authors :
Delussu, Rita
Putzu, Lorenzo
Fumera, Giorgio
Source :
International Journal of Computer Vision. Oct2024, Vol. 132 Issue 10, p4473-4509. 37p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In recent years, there has been a growing interest in synthetic data for several computer vision applications, such as automotive, detection and tracking, surveillance, medical image analysis and robotics. Early use of synthetic data was aimed at performing controlled experiments under the analysis by synthesis approach. Currently, synthetic data are mainly used for training computer vision models, especially deep learning ones, to address well-known issues of real data, such as manual annotation effort, data imbalance and bias, and privacy-related restrictions. In this work, we survey the use of synthetic training data focusing on applications related to video surveillance, whose relevance has rapidly increased in the past few years due to their connection to security: crowd counting, object and pedestrian detection and tracking, behaviour analysis, person re-identification and face recognition. Synthetic training data are even more interesting in this kind of application, to address further, specific issues arising, e.g., from typically unconstrained image or video acquisition conditions and cross-scene application scenarios. We categorise and discuss the existing methods for creating synthetic data, analyse the synthetic data sets proposed in the literature for each of the considered applications, and provide an overview of their effectiveness as training data. We finally discuss whether and to what extent the existing synthetic data sets mitigate the issues of real data, highlight existing open issues, and suggest future research directions in this field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09205691
Volume :
132
Issue :
10
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Computer Vision
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180106138
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11263-024-02102-x