Advances in vision technology are enhancing traffic surveillance and enforcement applications. 
     
Variable lighting conditions have long been a stumbling block for vision technology applications in the transport sector. With applications such as ANPR, the read-rate may vary between daylight and night and can be adversely affected by glare and low sun. 
     
Madrid, Spain-based 
     
The system’s software detects vehicle number plates in the monochrome images and identifies the individual characters using an optical character recognition technique with an artificial neural network. The license plate number and the colour overview are then correlated in real time and transmitted to a control centre.
     
Images from the monochrome camera, Point Grey’s 1,920 pixel x 1,200 pixel GigE with a Sony Pregius CMOS global shutter sensor and an IR filter, are analysed to determine the license plates. An almost identical 1,920 x 1,200 pixel GigE camera but equipped with a full colour 
     
While the pulsed light overcomes low light conditions, competing against bright sunlight is a very different matter. However, in the IR spectrum the intensity of sunlight varies according to its wavelength, meaning the wavelength chosen to illuminate the traffic scene is an important design consideration. 
 
Traditionally, many ANPR systems have used infrared  light in the 880nm  wavelength range whereas at 940nm, the intensity of  sunlight is about  40% lower than at 880nm. Therefore in order to  minimise sunlight  interference, Lector decided to illuminate traffic  scenes with a  custom-built array of pulsed LEDs that operate at 940nm.
     
There   is, however, a trade-off as Gonzalo Garcia Palacios, R&D manager  at  Lector Vision explains:  “When using the higher 940nm wavelength  LEDs,  the sensitivity of the sensor in the camera is reduced.” 
      
To  compensate for this phenomena the control system pulses the LEDs at  microsecond intervals to produce an intense strobed IR light that, when  reflected from the license plates, can be easily detected by the  monochrome camera. By pulsing the LEDs the intensity can be higher than  the continuous rating would allow. While the scene is illuminated by the  pulsed IR light, the controller triggers the cameras to capture both  monochrome and colour images of the traffic. 
     
Both  images are then transferred over the GigE interface to Traffic Eye’s  embedded quad-core processor where the monochrome image is analysed to  determine the characters on the license plates. 
     
Initially  the software searches the image for rectangular regions of interest  which could be a license plate and these regions are further analysed by  detecting discontinuities in brightness in the images to determine the  characters’ boundaries. Having located the characters the system then  identifies each one using a software-based artificial neural network  which has been ‘trained’ by being presented with thousands of examples.  The system then uses these examples to infer rules to identify unknown  characters from the images captured by Traffic Eye’s monochrome camera.  The license plate number and images of the scene (and optionally a GPS  time stamp) can be transmitted via cable, optical fibre, GPRS or 4G.  Agencies monitoring the traffic flow and enforcing red light violations  can view both colour and monochrome images to identify particular  vehicles.
     
Aided in part by  the global shutter, the system is said to have proved capable of  reading number plates of vehicles travelling at speeds in excess of  200km/h. Lector has now trained the software to identify license plates  from more than 40 countries including most countries in South America,  South and Central Europe, and Arabic countries including the UEA and  Algeria.  
     
 At Intertraffic  Point Grey announced 3.2 and 5MP CMOS versions of its Blackfly GigE and  Chameleon3 USB3 cameras with Sony’s 2nd generation Pregius global  shutter sensors. A smaller (3.45µm) pixel size allows more pixels to be  packed into a smaller optical format, allowing more compact and  lower-cost lenses to be used.
    
        
        



