Abstract:
The recently proposed robust principle component analysis (RPCA) has been successfully applied in background subtraction. However, low-rank decomposition makes sense on t...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
The recently proposed robust principle component analysis (RPCA) has been successfully applied in background subtraction. However, low-rank decomposition makes sense on the condition that the foreground pixels (sparsity patterns) are uniformly located at the scene, which is not realistic in real-world applications. To overcome this limitation, we reconstruct the input video frames and aim to make the foreground pixels not only sparse in space but also sparse in time. Therefore, we propose a joint video frame set division and RPCA-based method for background subtraction. In addition, we use the motion as a priori knowledge which has not been considered in the current subspace-based methods. The proposed method consists of two phases. In the first phase, we propose a lower bound-based within-class maximum division method to divide the video frame set into several subsets. In this way, the successive frames are assigned to different subsets in which the foregrounds are located at the scene randomly. In the second phase, we augment each subset using the frames with a small quantity of motion. To evaluate the proposed method, the experiments are conducted on real-world and public datasets. The comparisons with the state-of-the-art background subtraction methods validate the superiority of our method.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology ( Volume: 24, Issue: 12, December 2014)