Vahid Foroughi

2papers

2 Papers

CVJun 5, 2022
Computer Vision-based Characterization of Large-scale Jet Flames using a Synthetic Infrared Image Generation Approach

Carmina Pérez-Guerrero, Jorge Francisco Ciprián-Sánchez, Adriana Palacios et al.

Among the different kinds of fire accidents that can occur during industrial activities that involve hazardous materials, jet fires are one of the lesser-known types. This is because they are often involved in a process that generates a sequence of other accidents of greater magnitude, known as domino effect. Flame impingement usually causes domino effects, and jet fires present specific features that can significantly increase the probability of this happening. These features become relevant from a risk analysis perspective, making their proper characterization a crucial task. Deep Learning approaches have become extensively used for tasks such as jet fire characterization; however, these methods are heavily dependent on the amount of data and the quality of the labels. Data acquisition of jet fires involve expensive experiments, especially so if infrared imagery is used. Therefore, this paper proposes the use of Generative Adversarial Networks to produce plausible infrared images from visible ones, making experiments less expensive and allowing for other potential applications. The results suggest that it is possible to realistically replicate the results for experiments carried out using both visible and infrared cameras. The obtained results are compared with some previous experiments, and it is shown that similar results were obtained.

9.8CVMar 19
A reconfigurable smart camera implementation for jet flames characterization based on an optimized segmentation model

Gerardo Valente Vazquez-Garcia, Carmina Perez Guerrero, Eduardo Garduño et al.

In this work we present a novel framework for fire safety management in industrial settings through the implementation of a smart camera platform for jet flames characterization. The approach seeks to alleviate the lack of real-time solutions for industrial early fire segmentation and characterization. As a case study, we demonstrate how a SoC FPGA, running optimized Artificial Intelligence (AI) models can be leveraged to implement a full edge processing pipeline for jet flames analysis. In this paper we extend previous work on computer-vision jet fire segmentation by creating a novel experimental set-up and system implementation for addressing this issue, which can be replicated to other fire safety applications. The proposed platform is designed to carry out image processing tasks in real-time and on device, reducing video processing overheads, and thus the overall latency. This is achieved by optimizing a UNet segmentation model to make it amenable for an SoC FPGAs implementation; the optimized model can then be efficiently mapped onto the SoC reconfigurable logic for massively parallel execution. For our experiments, we have chosen the Ultra96 platform, as it also provides the means for implementing full-fledged intelligent systems using the SoC peripherals, as well as other Operating System (OS) capabilities (i.e., multi-threading) for systems management. For optimizing the model we made use of the Vitis (Xilinx) framework, which enabled us to optimize the full precision model from 7.5 million parameters to 59,095 parameters (125x less), which translated into a reduction of the processing latency of 2.9x. Further optimization (multi-threading and batch normalization) led to an improvement of 7.5x in terms of latency, yielding a performance of 30 Frames Per Second (FPS) without sacrificing accuracy in terms of the evaluated metrics (Dice Score).